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About Google Book Search Google's mission is to organize the world's information and to make it universally accessible and useful. Google Book Search helps readers discover the world's books while helping authors and publishers reach new audiences. You can search through the full text of this book on the web at |http: //books .google .com/I Private Library ef BRABSHAW H. SWALES> DETROIT, - MICH. I « i'. 4 44 I I f r I BY CHARLES CONRAD ABBOTT ^ Thb Frbbdom op thb Fiblds. With Fron- tispiece by Alice Barber Stephens, and three photogravures. Buckram, orna- mental, j|x.5o \/ Travbls in a Trbb-Top. With Frontispiece by Alice Barber Stephens, and three photo- gravures. Buckram, ornamental, $1.30 Abbot fs FirttieU orndFortMi Library HTub Frbbdom or thb Fiblds and Travbls iir A Trbb-Top. Two vohnnes in a box. zsmo. Buckram, ornamental, $3.00 >/Rbcbnt Ramblbs; Or, In Touch with Na- ture. Illustrated, xamo. Cloth, |3.oo Thb Hbrmit op Nottingham. A novd. xsmo. Cloth, onuunental, ^x.as Whbn thb Crnturt was Nbw. a novel, zamo. Cloth, |z.oo A Colonial Wooing. A noveL xamo. Cloth, $1.00 ^ Bird-Lamd Ecrobs. Profusely illustrated by William Everett Cram. Crown 8vo. Cloth, gilt top, |a.oo >CThb Birds About Us. Illustrated, zamo. Qoth, |a.oo Abbotes Bird Library. >nThb Birds About Us and Bird-Land Echobs. Two volumes in a box. zamo. Cloth, gilt top, ^.00 tHE FREEDOM OF THE FIELDS I I. From many a fact some fancy springs To charm life's idle hours $ To frowning cliA rare beauty clings When decked with laughing flowers. t; I , J'^''«A»8nA\\^H.SWALBS, / MT^trt, . Mien. FREEDOM OF THE FIELPS BY CHARLES C.ABBOTT J.B.LIPPINCOTT CO. PHILADELPHIA i^ ^' vuW" H. SWAL8S, - MICH. FREEDOM OF THE FIELDS by CHARLES crXraOTT JRLIPPINCOTTCa PHILADELPHIA i^o^ ^, Copyright, 1897, n r BY : J. B. LippiNcoTT Company. • * • • • • *• ^ RAMBLBS, TBARS AGO, ABOUT CAMBRIDGB, COMCOBD, AND CAPS COD, AMD OTHERS, WITH THB SAMB COMPAMION, pv^ OVBR THB HOMB MBADOWS, AND UNDBR THB OLD OAKS rv ALONG THB HIXXSIDB, ARB SO OFTBN RBCALLBD AND > ALWAYS WITH SUCH PLBASURB, THAT I CANNOT DO OTHBRWISB, AND BB AT PBACB WITH MTSBLP, THAN & DEDICATE WALTER FAXON, CAMBRIDGX, MASSACHUSETTS, THIS SIMPLB RBCORD OP MT LATBB DATS AND DOINGS. w* w* /V* Thkex Bxxchxs, May 259 1897. PREFACE THE author has this consolation: a preface is the whim of the publisher, and so no reasonable reader will look for literary merit in this perfundtory feature of a book. I have one statement to make that gives me great satisfa£Uon and is in place here, if anywhere. I wrote the following pages for my own amusement, and never for an instant had in mind either the patience of a possible reader or the views of any publisher as to what a book should be. I have not adopted a single suggestion made by critics of earlier volumes, but gone out of my way to repeat the offence, complained of recently, of sneer- ing at the impudent assumption of some, necessarily nameless. For once, I have said my say in precisely my own fashion. Never before has this privilege been unrestri6ledly allowed me, and not improbably there are •• vii viii Prefiice those who will cry out« ** So much the worse for you." Pages, here and there, of this volume have seen the light of day before in periodicals, and are here reproduced by permission. I trust the reader will not be moved to say of such, ''And once was quite sufficient,*' or feel it his duty to find serious fault with that which confronts him for the first time. v». v». A. Thrxx Bkechks, May 25, 1897. CONTENTS Page An April Day Dream ii The Changeful Skies ig Passing of the Bluebird jo In Apathetic August jp A Foretaste of Autumn 4g Indian Summer j8 The Effects of a Drought 6s Winter^green 8o The Witchery of Winter 87 Company and Solitude gj Overdoing the Past 118 Dreaming Bob I2g Winkle: the EeUMan 146 Windfalls 170 My Neighbor's Wood-Shed ig7 Index 22$ IX Illustrations Page April Day Dreams . . . Frontispiece By Alice Barber Stephens Apathetic August 40 The Witchery of Winter 88 The Overflowing Delaware .... 148 AN APRIL DAT DREAM AT the foot of the hill, where the wild winds of winter can never reach, and a bubbling spring keeps all frost at arm's length, there I have been accustomed to go for many a year, not to witness any exciting event or hear the initial concert of the coming season, but because that airy fairy creature Spring first touches the earth at this point. Here we find the first of her footprints, and always, before going up to possess the land, she here tests her powe r of revivificatio n by kissin g the heavy exelids of the sleeping violets. Can there be better reason for this vernal stroll to the hill-foot ? The very fa£l that the year's proper beginning is so gen- erally associated with youth, and youth in its most attra6live guise is of itself an induce- ment to give more heed to the season of promise than to those of fulfilment which follow. II 12 An April Day Dream How often the lively play of spring has been performed on this planet the geologists have never told us, but for a good ten thou- sand years or more there has been no re- vision of the tezt> and yet there is no lack of novelty. The quips and cranks of the imps that follow in the train of her ethereal mildness are always fresh. Likewise^^the loveliness of dewy violets^ of golden daffo- dils, and blushing arbutus are as dear to us as they were to our forbears in the infancy of the race.J But we are never asked to be con- tent with a flower. An endless array of attradlions is spread before us, but, being blind, we cry out that the world is empty. It is not uncommon to find men posing as perfedlion and criticising that part of the world wherein they happen to be, and a genuine appreciation of nature detedls in such the only blemish of an admirable out- look. To-day, though Winter has not yet quite relaxed his hold, there were abundant violets; andLwhat emerald outsparkles the dewy mosses ?J Here, at the foot of an old oak that had sheltered many a passing Indian from the midsummer sun, and perhaps bore yet the scars blazed upon it by the first An April Day Dream 13 Dutch trader that passed down the Dela- ware ; here, in the bright April sunshine, I had but to raise my eyes to skies of marvel- lous beauty. Surely there is cause for joy in a cloud-flecked sky, and who lacks company when with budding oaks ? Here, here! called the ecstatic crested jit^ as if I had a thought of leaving such a pleasant place. ^There are times when one can more profitably curl up in a corner and indulge in day-dreams than wander about J and this nook, with its April sunshine, invited to meditation. The mystery of the mosses, the significance of the flowers, the ghang e- fulness of panorami c ski es, and, back of all, if we give up these problems in despair, the suggestiveness of patriarchal oaks. I had no need to be called back by that embodiment of all birdly virtues, the crested tit, the bird of all others that knows nothing of discour- agement, and bids us keep in good heart un-{ der the blackest skies. All that surrounds us speaks to us, but too often in strange tongue. Patience is an ex- cellent interpreter, but how seldom we wel- come it. It were worthy of the day to read the wrinkles of the gnarly oak; but again 14 An April Day Dream the birds called^ and I looked away. A ^rush was busy with last winter's leaves, and chirped excitedly when it found me at the old oak's mossy foot. It scolded, I think, protesting that I was trespassing in 'd. bird-land; and well it might, for have we V>^^ not relinquished all our rights by years of per- \secution that must forever be a disgrace? How I wished that this early thrush would sing ! But I knew that it was a passing vis- itor, and not in tune. Its melody was re- served for some far New England wood, and I was content to recall the summer thrushes I have known. Waving a violet wand to bring back other days, I saw again the rudely paved path leading to the old spring-house, and heard again the gurgling water as it hur- ried through the long troughs wherein were placed the rows of milk-pans. Passing them, the water took up a livelier strain, and sang a sweet, sibilant song as it greeted the sun- shine. Sparkling water is to be found every- where, — *' laughing water," as the Indians called it; rippling currents smile in every brook ; hurried waters rush over every ob- strufUng rock; but nowhere since those early days have I seen a more merry flow An April Day Dream 15 than that of this old spring-house brook. It was the first ** wild" water I had ever setfn. Has this to do with it ? In its shallows^ I saw for the first time living fishes ; on the damp and mossy stones near its edge stood and stared bright-barred and spotted sala- manders, that fled in terror from my extended hand ; there, too, squatted the pretty leopard- frog, that leaped beyond my reach as I ap- proached. It is not strange that I have seen no brook since that sparkled like this one. A full half-century has not dimmed its bright- ness in my fancy, and the place is as I first saw it when I close my eyes and stand be- neath the drooping elm and stately maples that now mark the spot, from which, save the brook, every old-time feature has been removed. While basking in the April sunshine, as I recall the old spring-house to-day, the out- standing glory of the place was the visit of a gentle jwallpw that came quite near me and gathered at the water's edge a little pellet of damp earth for the nest it was building. What a marvel of beauty was that barn swal- low to my childish eyes ! and the bird is just as beautiful to-day. Swallows at all times / i6 An April Day Dream add a charm to the landscape. They are never so numerous as to be a blot upon the fair field. Early comers, they herald the more timid birds of summer, but you are all too likely to overlook them, for they are silent as the flowers when the thrushes are in song. Not literally silent, — no bird is that, — but we fail to hear their twitter when the grosbeak's grand outburst of melody fills the evening air. It is not strange. The stanch friends of childhood are usually for- gotten when we face the ** great" people of the earth ; but what, after all, are these to the trusty folk of early and unsophisticated days ? How few ever reach beyond the grade of twittering swallows and yet die envious of those who make more noise in the world and so attrad the gaping crowd ! '* Poor and content is rich," and more's the pity that we did not place greater value on the twittering swallows of our early spring. Their twitter, when the chill of winter still lingers in the air, is sweet music, and the bird is all we ask to fill the April outlook. Poor then it may be, as compared with the wealth of later days, but were we not con- tent, ay, exuberant, over a single swallow, and An April Day Dream 17 80 rich ? Poor and content is rich, and rich enough I At least, let us not be forgetful of the April days when the swallows, like guardian spirits, attended upon us and filled every path with pleasantness and peace. But it is useless to preach : that is some- thing long since overdone in this world; our bodies, far more than our minds, attend upon it. We bless the first swallows of the season and straightway forget them when the thrush arrives; and more, if they dare to twitter, to remind us of April happiness when we would revel in the ecstasy of May, then we curse their impudence. They do not grieve over it. Constant swallows ; in- constant, miserably inconstant and inconsist- ent roan ! A lively clatter, as if the birds of summer were dancing on dead leaves, roused me from my fancies, and I was one with the present world again. An April shower, a tearful smile, as some one has not inaptly called it, passed over the woods and across the meadows, leaving in its train glittering glories that dimmed even the early violets. Stand, if you will, at some commanding point and overlook the landscape for miles i8 An April Day Dream and miles away; see not a single tree, bat thousands of them; see not a single clod, bat field after field ; see the scattered rains of the dead year, bat never a hopefal violet at your feet, and to you it will be winter still. In a single sunny nook I found a little summer, heard nothing of the fretful moan- ing of chilly winds, but music enough to lead me in fancy to the flood-tide of mid- sunmier melody. A bit of moss, scattered violets, — faint foretastes, let me hope, of the eternal spring. rHE CHANGEFUL SKIES I cannot read ; *Twixt every page my thoughts go stray at large, Down in the meadow. Tmorbav. DOWN in the meadow! — a poem of four words that will never need ex- planatory notes. I am down in the sense of being nearer the level of the sea, when there, but up, high up, in exhilaration. Lord Bacon says that this emotion is not as profound as joy ; but what use in such fine distin£tions ? I joy in the exhilaration that comes from breathing the meadow air, and let us attend to it, rather than to the mean- ings of words, that keep our cheap champions of erudition so busy. I went down to the meadows to-day, that I might more readily look upward, having thought before starting how little apt are we to consider the sky when taking an outing, and yet Shakespeare's 19 20 The Changeful Skies " skyey influences" are more potent than we think. I do not mean such influence as that which leads to glancing upward in the morn- ing, and, in the fulness of our conceit, con- tradidUng the barometer. There are men who do this, get caught in the rain, and, de- nying it the next day, prove themselves not only fools, but worse. Thoreau encoun- tered such folk even in Concord, and thought they poisoned their immediate atmosphere. In going out of doors, it is a little strange that that which is most prominent is likely to be least noticed. The truth* is, the sky, which is but a name for an appearance, is nevertheless the most obvious of fa£ks. If not palpable as the earth beneath, it makes itself felt, which is much the same thing so far as the rambler is concerned ; and certainly much is lost if we fail to respond to skyey influences. We think little about the sky, can roam for hours beneath it without looking up ; and yet it is the most assertive objedl in the out- look: poets have applied to it more adjec- tives than to any objedl beneath. They descant on *' the witchery of the soft blue sky," but what of the heartlessness of the The Changeful Skies 21 steel-blue canopy, when there is not a trace of life within sight or hearing ? The cloud- less sky of June is not that of January. Because there were few birds, fewer flowers, and but little green grass where I chanced to wander, I took the hint from Ovid: the skies arc open — let us try the skies. So I looked long upon them as they overhung the old meadows, old as the glacial period, and yet how new as compared with the sky that now looked down upon them ! To-day the sky was blue, fading to violet, with one great white cloud that slowly marched to intercept the sun. It was with keen pleasure that I watched this rolled and rounded mass of drifted snow, for such it seemed, draw near. It did not dissolve nor hurry in torn fragments from the fray, but with bold front shut out the sunbeams. What a marvellous change takes place when the meadows are shifted from sunshine to shade ! That short-lived shadow brought in its train a whispering breeze, but so gently did it pass that I fancied it was the shadow itself that whispered. A word here as to the imagination. If it is kept within too close bounds, your outing 22 The Changeful Skies is likely to prove so many miles of walking to no purpose. It is not fair to say that inaccuracy is sure to follow the free play of the imagination. Our fancy need not aSt as a distorting glass, and does not, except with the author's connivance. The greatest blun- derers about nature have been the precise istudents who occasionally find themselves outside their closets. It is one thing, as Bryant puts it, to Go forth under the open sky and list To Nature*! teachings, but another to know what to do when you get there. My suggestion is to let your imagination have scope as well as your ap- preciation of the adual facts you meet with. There need be no conflidl in your mind, nor any misleading statement, if you are moved to speak. To return: quickly again the sky was bright and blue, and the meadows were • filled with light, — a clear, warm, penetrating light, that was reaching the rootlets and bulbs in the damp soil, quickening them. The grape hyacinth had already responded, and reHedled the deepest color the April The Changeful Skies 23 skies had offered; and the earliest of our larger lilies was above the grass, with the yellow of the noonday glare in its blossoms. These flowers show well together, repre- senting on earth the sun and sky ; bpt how seldom do we turn from them to the high heavens ! A few flowers will hold us while the firmament is marked by conditions which may, at least in our lifetime, never again occur. There hangs in the hall a barometer that has foretold for many years, without blun- dering, the kind of weather that we are to have, and it can be read with profit when interpreting the skies. For instance, it often happens that before the great masses of sullen clouds, bringing the summer shower or the day-long rain, appear above the horizon, we are informed by it, and so can anticipate their coming and watch their progress. This is akin, in the pleasure it affords, to finding a new flower or hearing the song of a rare bird. There is less sameness in the cloud- flecked skies than upon the earth when light and shadow dash across the scene. I recall one long cloud that slowly rose from half the horizon at once and moved like a huge cur- 24 The Changeful Skies tain overhead. The air was ** light'' as that on mountain-tops, and so free from dust that the senses of sight and hearing were unusually acute. The sky seemed more distant than when free from clouds, or» as the phrase goes, was hollow. The nearer objedb in the outlook were more removed than usual, as though we looked through the wrong end of a field-glass, and yet every outline was distindl. Sounds that we often hear without recognizing as other than part of the general hum of the day's adivity were now startling. There was not a crow in sight, yet the clamor of a hundred was plainly heard, and the whistle of a cardinal redbird and the clear call of a crested tit came from the hill- side half a mile away. Such sounds as these, coming from unseen creatures, added interest to these ** hollow" skies, and from them all revelations were ezpedled. Much besides rain comes from above. From my comfort- able resting-place against a sloping willow I saw the avant-coureurs^ it might be, of the coming storm, a long line of small black dots that slowly altered shape and, while yet afar oflT, proved to be herons, — long-necked, long-legged, broad-winged herons, that give The Changeful Skies 25 ^ch a ,w]ldness to the remaining marshes ^ hereabouts. With a background of blue sky they might have passed unseen, but now each was grandly pidlured against the leaden cloud, and in the still air I fancied I could hear the rustling of their wing-beats. Slowly as they came they passed from sight. When they were lost to me, I turned hopefully to the point where they had ap- peared, and, to my surprise, saw others. These were not black specks, but white dots that lengthened into lines and grew to great white herons, following in the path of their blue brethren. The clear air and leaden background brought out every outline. I could see them move their heads from side to side, as if to view the old haunts of their ancestors. How vividly they brought back the days of old delight, when I was young and the world newer than I find it now ! — those over-full days that in many a way might have continued but for the ignorance of man and the vanity of woman. It is a red-letter day of late when we can see the white herons on the river shore ; yet I have seen them in great numbers, and it is on record, ** the white cranes did whiten the river 26 The Changeful Skies bank like a great snow-drift." Let heartless fashion demand a feather, and the death-war- rant of thousands of birds is signed. Here and there a protesting voice may be raised, but only to be drowned in the sneers of an indifferent people. I once was foolish enough to speak of the rights of a rambler to the wild life left about us, and was met with ridicule. ** I've got to pradlise on swallows to learn to shoot quick," was my interlocutor's reply. My summer sky must be cleared of its swal- lows, it seems, to meet the useless skill of a brute neighbor ! How I rejoiced when his gun burst ! There is a world of suggestiveness in the words just used, "my summer skies." Therein lies ownership of a wholly satis- fadlory kind. They are mine without cost, without even the asking, and, better still, without depriving others, — mine, yours, the common wealth of all ; and yet few, it ap- pears, place any value upon them. To many they are of as little importance as the frame of a pidbire; yet often they are the real pi£hire and the earth is but the naked plat- form upon which we stand to view it. It is hard to find a fitting phrase for many a pano- The Changeful Skies 27 ramie sky ; ts the skies of early June, blue of incomparable shade, with white clouds, pink-edged and piled into fantastic shapes,^ great castles that are unbuilt before you can people them with the merry elfs and fays of the month of roses. In June we have those bright skies that deepen when the day is done to blue-black, and, losing their flatness, are lifted to a hollow dome that, star-studded, shows you at last how very far away it really is. The skies that at noon rested on the tree-tops that hem in the little space about us grow immeasurably grand at midnight ; and when from out these starlit skies we hear strange voices, they assume a new impor- tance, and we begin to realize better their significance. The upper region, our sky, is seldom lacking in animal life. Probably hundreds of birds, in the course of a day, pass over us, just out of sight ; and when in the silent watches of the night we plainly hear the voices of wanderers, a new chapter of ornithology is opened to us. The clear- toned call of a plover, the hoarse croak of a raven, the chirping of many finches, the fretful scream of an eagle, have all been noted in a single night. We can only fol- 28 The Changeful Skies low these birds in fancy, but the fancy will not lead us astray. The diredlion in which they are going can be determined, the prob- able elevation of their flight-path estimated, the guiding features of their course made probable. Their purpose can, of course, only be conjedured. It is not strange that birds of many if not all kinds travel in the dark, for this absence of light is but relative. The stars of themselves are nothing to the birds but as they are refledled in the water. When visible in this way, they ad as finger- posts along a river valley. Such doubtless is the guide to much of the annual migrato- rial flight ; and the black lines of mountains would be readily recognized as such, while the lights beyond would indicate those of another valley, with its star-refle6ling river. So comprehensive is a birdVeye view that migration has nothing marvellous about it. May it not be, too, that these long journeys are commenced in daylight, and that when great elevation is reached the dire£tion at the outset can be readily maintained? A bird does not fly in a circle, as a man walks when lost in the woods. When fog or excessive cloudiness is encountered, wandering birds The Changeful Skies 29 drop to the earth, as is shown by water-birds being found upon our upland fields, perhaps miles from their accustomed haunts. Whatever the time of year, we have ex- cellent reasons for ezpedling much of the sky, and should not let our eagerness to see the obje£b there from close at hand cause us to forget from whence they came. Do not tell me that a bird, or a butterfly, or even an inanimate obje£l, is but a wind-tossed acci- dent. Do I not know it ? If an objedl is seen to come from the sky above, why not at least endeavor to meet it in mid-air ? By so doing, you take a step into the realms of fancy. Such a whim deceives no one, not even the se]f-ele£led professors of bird-lore. Some fa£ls without fancy are as repulsive as birds without feathers, and the world is not likely to suffer because of other views than those of the painfully prosaic. Dispute this if you will ; but now ** There is a light cloud by the moon, *Tis passing, and 'twill pass fiill soon,** and to it I would rather attend than listen to any argument. ^ PASSING OF THE BLUEBIRD I \'* T is said that the old-time bluebird is be- coming eztin£l ; that the blessed blue- birds of our door-yards and rustic arbors are passing away; that the rude box nailed to the wall is forsaken or the home of alien sparrows ; the hollow in the old apple-tree is unoccupied, and so with the May-day blossoms there will no more be heard that cheery warbling, comparable only, in its suggestiveness, to the tuneful song sparrow and lively chatter of the nervous wren. Until recently these made the jolly trio that have gladdened our gardens since Colonial I days. No more bluebirds ! Why not say there shall be no more spring, for is it really spring without them ? For many years, perhaps for all this cen- tury, there has stood a huge dead sycamore on the river bank, and in the hollow of its cavernous trunk bluebirds are wont to con- 30 Passing of the Bluebird 31 gregate. The tempests of winter, the floods of spring, even the lightning's stroke, scarcely make these trustful bluebirds afraid ; or, if they flee at a time of great tumult, they soon return, and there are but few days in a year that I cannot see and hear these happy ten- ants of a hollow tree. At one lonely spot, alike free from man and the alien sparrow, the bluebird is still as fixed a feature as the blue sky; but the tree cannot last miich longer, and then the birds will be driven to some more remote locality. The times have indeed changed. The bluebirds no longer come to us, — ^we must go to them. Until within a very few years, there was a colony of bluebirds near my house, and however the conditions of the weather af- feCted the birds found scattered over the country, here to-day and gone to-morrow, those in the old hay-barrack were never far away. I do not believe that the bluebird is really dying out through natural causes, but simply that they are or have been driven offl The fatal blunder was the introdudlion of the English sparrow, which never did one particle of good, and now has become a posi- tive curse, and one, I fear, beyond control. 32 Passing of the Bluebird As if we had not birds enough of our own to keep down all the worms that ever crawled on a tree ! Why^ then, did they not do it ? it has been asked with much confidence, but a stinging reply lies in wait for the questioner. We would not let them. For years on years there was absolute indifference in the matter of bird-prote6lion. For half a century a law has been upon the statute-books with reference to the destrudtion of insedtivorous birds, and probably not enough fines have been coUedted to pay for the printing of the law. It is not long since that every boy made a coUedtion of birds' eggs if he could, and nests and eggs are openly advertised as for sale in two-penny periodicals devoted to the destrudlion of wild-life, under the catchy title of Natural History Journals. In times not long gone by were many ornithologists whose influence was all for ill. The vague hope of a new species being found led them to slaughter the most familiar birds even by the thousands, and, even in these more en- lightened days, a professional bird-man has described himself as ''a- slaughterer of the innocents." It would really seem as if some ornithologists, who should labor only for Passing of the Bluebird 33 bird-preservation, are really the bird's worst foes while able to coUedt, and then in their declining years shed crocodile tears over the skins of their vidlims. Then, too, we must consider the demand for feathers for millinery purposes. At last the enormity of this vile fashion is beginning to touch the public con- science, and if Audubon societies effect half the good at which they aim, they will prove one of the more notable blessings of these later days. But let us go back to the haunts of the bluebirds, even if deserted just now. For the first time in over twenty years I have failed to see and hear bluebirds in the month of May, and yet every other species common to the Delaware valley has been phenome- nally abundant. Never were there so many warblers, both summer residents and those that were northward bound; never more thrushes, more rose-breasted grosbeaks, vireos, fiy-catchers, and all the summer's tuneful host, — but no bluebirds. The reason is not difficult to determine. Every available nesting-site, such as formerly was occupied by a bluebird, is now in possession of the pestiferous sparrow. Happily, they find 34 Passing of the Bluebird their superiors at times^ and learn a useful lesson. I witnessed a combat recently be- tween a pair of sparrows and a great crested fiy-catcher. The nest of the latter had been tampered with, but the sparrows had cause to regret their impudence. Not on]y was their own nest destroyed, but both the birds soundly thrashed. There was a great commotion at the time among the birds of the orchard, and if the varied utter- ances of a dozen species could be translated we should have some most interesting read- ing. Scores of birds witnessed the battle, and, as none were silent, I fancied the sounds to be comments on the progress of the fray. The little house wrens, with whom blue- birds are always associated in our minds, fare better than their one-time companions. When once in possession of their homes they prove able to defend them successfully, and I do not find these cheerful creatures less abundant than formerly, though fewer are found nesting in the immediate vicinity of dwellings. They have been inconveni- enced by the sparrows, but not adtually driven out of whole se£Uons of the country. Passing of the Bluebird 35 Our efforts should be redoubled to aid the wren whenever persecuted^ and this is a simple matter. By keeping their boxes closed, after they leave us in autumn, until their reappearance in April, we will prevent the sparrows from taking possession in their absence, and boxes built for wrens should have the entrance too small for a sparrow to pass through it. By such simple means I have baffled the worthless foreigner, and have the native wrens at my door the sum- mer through. There being no more tame door-yard bluebirds, I have spent the* day with their wilder brethren. In a cluster of old birches on an island in the river I found these timid birds dwelling in comparative security. Their nests were in holes deserted years ago by golden-winged woodpeckers, and no foe but a man or a snake — often much alike— could have reached their eggs or young. My boat drifted to the sandy beach, and I sat very still. The birds paid no attention to me, and their singing was continuous. I closed my eyes for a while, and, while listen- ing, saw again the old arbor with its blue- bird-box at the entrance. I heard the songs 36 Passing of the Bluebird sung fifty years ago, and saw the people who were then nearest to me, and now ** All, all are gone, — the old, fiuniliar faces.** The process of eztindtion, inaugurated by ignorant men, may continue to the end in our villages and about the average farm- house, but there are spots where its blight cannot reach, and the literal fulfilment of the bluebird's doom is yet afar off. There iire islands and hill-sides, deep ravines and remote woodland tradts, that offer no attrac- tions to the invading sparrow, and here the bluebird can and does find a congenial home. It is true that in years past we almost domes- ticated it, but before that, in Indian times, it was a bird of the woods, and so can again become, unless our forest fires do away with timbered trades. The passing of the blue- bird is no empty phrase, but the passing is not that of out of existence, but out of reach. It is greatly to be deplored, but there seems to be no help for it. And now the question arises, Are there no other birds to take their place ? I think so. By consideration for their welfare, by con- tributing to their needs, by preventing their Passing of the Bluebird 37 being molested^ the warblers^ pee- wees, grosbeaks, orioles, and others will come nearer and nearer to us. I am positive of this, and have my own yard, open to all, as a proof of my assertion. I am cultivating that pretty warbler, the redstart, now, 'and find the bird extremely entertaining. It nests very near the house and shows no fear, merely keeping out of reach. It is but one of many kinds, and, though without a song, it is never silent, and by reason of its ac- tivity is usually more in evidence than many of the larger species. Like all little birds, redstarts are " feathered appetites," and eat- ing from dawn to dark seems to be the sole end of their existence ; but what does this signify to us? The destru£Uon of innu- merable msects, the health of shade trees, the perfe6ling of flowers. Of late these birds have seemed to embody every bird- world grace and typify the bird-life that is or ought to be about us. That ought to be about us: how much of meaning in those few simple words! There is not a door- yard but should be a safe harbor for every bird that now lives a life of doubtful ease in the remoter thickets. The fence that sep- 38 Passing of the Bluebird arates field from garden should be no barrier, but many are the birds that look upon the paling or boards as a danger line to be crossed with the utmost caution. In far more than half of the farms I ever visited I was com- pelled to go to the birds, — not one of them would come to me. They were looked upon, if a thought was ever given to them, as food for the cats or sport for the children, to keep them from mischief. Can there be greater mischief than that wrought by the persecution and destruction of the birds that ought to be about us ? Though the songs of a thousand birds ring through the leafy arches of old woods, and many a familiar strain steals through the open windoW these long summer days, there comes with them, all too surely, a tinge of sadness that one of the merry host is miss- ing, and not a melancholy thrush or warbling vireo but seems to be voicing its own sorrow or echoing ours at the passing away of the bluebirds of blessed memory. IN APAtHETIC AUGUST THE air is ever fall of meaning sounds^ but are our heads fall of wit to interpret them ? Can there be an unmeaning sounds*— mere noise without significance ? I think not. It is August now, and there is a marked lull in the flood of bird-music that for months has overswept the fields. The dew — for the sun has just risen — still weighs heavily upon the grass, and there is no lively creaking yet of the heat-defying crickets. But I press my ear lightly to the cool ground, and there is plainly heard the steady hum of many a£^iv- ities, albeit there is no name for any one of them. The quiet earth is busy as a bee, yet there is no sign of her labors ; none, at least, save the low uninterrupted sound that only those who listen most carefully can hear. An unnoticed, all-negledled sound, but not unmeaning. We lack the power of its interpretation, that is all, and fling at it 39 40 In Apathetic August such a word as '' unmeaning^" as if we were lords of creation and not creation lord of us. Nature has little patience with mere fuss and feathers. If there is a great noise, there is a great cause behind it. We can publish our own littleness by pleading inability to ex- plain the events of a passing day, but be cau- tious of criticism of superior power. Yet it is as bad to underestimate our strength. We often can do more than we think lies within our powers. We can learn more than our neighbors if we adopt better methods, nor fall by the way because so many gems of truth are in a matrix from which no human patience can extradl them. Have we culti- vated our patience until it has acquired the acme of its possible growth ? How very silent is this August morning ! yet but a slight change in position, and I find it sound- full. Be not deceived by ap- pearances. How deserted the woods and meadows, hill-side and upland fields ! Are they ? Your eyes may be more at fault than you suspedl, and while you step so firmly forward you may really be playing blind- man's-buff with the landscape. As I pass it by a field sparrow rises from his feast of seeds In Apathetic August 41 with leisure wing^^beats and trills in a listless way when perched upon a projedUng stake of the old fence. It is August^ the bird plainly intimates by its manner^ and watches me come and go with far more indifference than distrust. Even the a£^ivity born of fear is out of place during the last month of summer. The sparrow's few and feeble notes fall into the deep rut into which all August a£^ivities have run these many centu- ries, and the listener, with ears as languid as his laggard steps, hears them only with Au- gust indifference. To think that bird music and the rustling of leaves are now akin. Has this sinking to a soulless level actually taken place ? How far are we at fault ? This same wee sparrow caused a bounding pulse last April. Then there was an eledlric thrill in every trembling note that sounded an invitation to the fields that could not be refused; to April fields with little more than green grass skirting the newly ploughed ground; grass, most meagrely dotted with violets that shrank from every breeze, and now this same bird song rouses no emotion. Who or what turns the current off and leaves us as much dead as alive in August ? 42 In Apathetic August Some malign spirit long ago undennined our faith in the merits of the month, and no one has had energy since to rebuild it. The resolution to be up and doing is very brilliant when a suggestion to others, but how dull it becomes when a personal application! It borders on the heroic to take up a burden in August, and I was no further than thinking of the matter when a quail whistled at my side. That clear, ringing, fife-like "Bob-white" proved the bell-call that rang up the curtain of my eyes. After all, it was I that had been asleep, and not Mother Earth taking an August nap. That little sparrow has a new song now. Every note comes bounding over the weedy grass, light-footed as an April sunbeam. The bird has quickened its pace, and marks my progress now with an eager eye. There is no indifference as to how the world may wag, and I, too, am prodded to a livelier in- terest. "Bob-white!'' rings again through the clear air, and I am thrilled by its ear- nestness. Then come the rustling of many wings and sound of many voices, — ^a flock of red-winged blackbirds passes overhead. In Apathetic August 43 As it proves^ life has simply been turned into a new channel, and I have been wan- dering up and down the dry bed of the spring-tide river. April and August are as far apart as the poles. These dreamy, lazy, apathetic August days are far more so in name than in fa£t ; the trouble is with our- selves. Following in the wake of the departing blackbirds, I hurry, adbially hurry, to the meadows. What though the catbirds enter a complaint ! They must be patient at the intrusion, even as I am — sometimes — when dull neighbors call. There is room enough for them and myself, but they will not think so. In this respedt man has a good deal of the catbird nature. I followed the black- birds in a general way over the pastures and through many a tangle of fruit-laden black- berries. It was not necessary there should be a goal. The novelty of August zCdvity was a sufficient incentive. When I came to a stand-still in the shade of an old sassafras, I found a red-eyed vireo quite excited over my presence, and a short search showed me that its nest was not yet empty. The poor bird's babies overfilled the nest, and in a few 44 In Apathetic August days they will be gone. Not gone^ I hope, into the jaws of some prowling mink, for I caught a glimpse of one while hunting for the nest. Indeed, this blood-thirsty imp, and not myself, may have been the cause of the bird's distress. It is interesting to note what a cover for wild-life is provided by an unchecked growth of weeds. No tropical jungle could be more dense than that of sturdy growths through which I struggled as I came here. The tall sassafras by which I stand reaches upward from a clean grassy knoll like the mast from the deck of a ship, but all above me are weeds, breast-high and pathless. No cow, even, has broken her way through them, and where I passed is only shown by a dark line where the dew was brushed away. In such a tangle a mink, or even a larger creature, finds safe quarters through the summer. In fa£t, a whole regi- ment of vermin might take refuge here and defy detedtion. Perhaps, it has been thought, such places are the slums of wild-life ; but has wild-life any degraded and ignoble forms ? How common to find absurd impressions as to the phases of wild-life that are uncouth in our eyes ! Snakes, lizards, and snapping-tur- r1 In Apathetic August 45 ties, for instance. 'Their very names cause a shadder ; but why ? The question is seldom asked. Their deviltry is taken for granted. But those things that we ordinarily call ugly and shun, because hideous in our eyes and suggestive of all that is to be avoided for peace of mind if not for safety of the body, really possess little if anything of the feat- ures our ignorance attributes to them. Omitting to see the fitness to their surround- ings of the creatures in question, we are ignorant, and must remain so, of much of which, had we better knowledge of it, would afford us endless pleasure. An imprisoned snapper in a restaurant-window rouses no interest, and may excite disgust, as it clum- sily moves to and fro in hopes of finding a path to liberty. But meet this creature in the marsh and attempt to dispute its passage, you will then be forced to admire its bravery, and it will dawn upon you how admirably does its brown shell, with adhering bits of mud and weeds, blend with the beaten paths of its nightly rambles ; or, if you are stand- ing by open water and should see this same turtle lift its head above the surface, and you have a good look at its brilliant but devilish 46 In Apathetic August eyes, or see it with open jaws in which is straggling a writhing, squealing, slippery black catfish, you will realize that marsh, mud, weeds, dark pools of stagnant water, snap-, pers, snakes, catfish, and scuttle-bugs are an admirably blended whole. As separate enti^ ties you may pass them by unheeded, but not when associated and Nature is the artist that has drawn the piAure. I have long preached no other dofbine than that of an apathetic August, but it is all a myth. Would that other preachers would be as honest in their convictions, though they be as changeable as weather- cocks. There is no real cessation of aAivity. Life has merely retired from the outskirts of crea- tion, and bids us plunge into the interior if we would still be spedbitors. Looking out from the knoll — for I still lingered in the shade of the old sassafras — there was literally nothing to be seen above or about the weeds except great bronze and green dragon-flies. But if these were there, other forms of life must also have been present. Dragon-flies do not feed on flowery sweets. Butterflies, too, tossed themselves ecstatically about, and clicked their pretty wings when angry ; but In Apathetic August 47 not all the inse£hs of a summer day ever filled a landscape with life. Something more sub* stantial for the earlier courses of a rambler's feast of sight-seeing is called for, — some bird or beast that can fill a weightier part. I had seen a brown mink, but his was too brief a stay ; but what was needed came in all-suffi- cient fulness when a troop of great blue herons settled near by. I shouted and ges- ticulated until they flew again. Their star- tled antics in the air are always such an improvement over their , indifferent pose when standing on the ground. These birds are too dignified for my fancy. They, too, forcibly remind me of a class of men that I never meet but I endeavor to disconcert them. To upset dignity is a delightful pas- time, especially when this dignity is an ill- fitting assumption, as is so generally the case. Therefore it is I am moved to throw stones at standing herons, that I may watch them gradually disentangle their wings and legs in the upper air. But, when settled down to steady, purposeful flight, these birds add a splendid feature to the meadow landscape. A little more vim on our part ; a few miles more of tramping ; earlier hours and a deal 48 In Apathetic August more faith that we have not been deserted^ and full to overflowing will prove every one of these miscalled and much-maligned apa- thetic August days. A FOREtAStE OF AUTUMN TO the docile eye a meadow spring can furnish a tide of discourse. I chanced upon a sloping bank to-day, brilliant as a garden tilled with care. Nature at times \i a fantastic florist. Yellow, red, and white blooms were profusely scattered in the rank grass, yet free of all rough, weedy chara6ler; The bees hummed no less happily because positive wilderness was lacking, and the cricket's cheery chirping rang out as gladly as where the tangled briers hid what remained of a long-negle6led fence. Here I might have gathered strawberries a month ago, and raspberries later, for this spot had once been a garden, I am more than sure ; there still is a trace of a boxwood hedge. The canes of the raspberries were richly colored, and would have warmed the landscape had it not been an August day. They sprawled over the ground and looked like gigantic purple 4 49 50 A Foretaste of Autumn spiders with their long, limp legs at rest ; or like the after-scene of a great battle among sach creatures, their brilliant purple legs, Yi£hors and vanquished alike, in a hopeless tangle. I have often noticed a scarcely defined purple cloud along the horizon, — ^in- deed, it is seldom absent on sunny days, — but here were the richest tones of the royal color near at hand. But I was not on a color hunt, nor yet de- sirous of much bird music ; neither did the shade of sturdy oaks woo me. Nothing that suggested even a6live thoughts could induce me to turn from my pathless, aimless wan- dering. August now, and the fittest time for day-dreams, for chasing idle nothings in a languid way, for loitering where my last step led me, and, turning to the objedt nearest at hand, I plucked the bloom from a bush yar- row, and revelled in its pungent, fancy-stir- ring odor. Curled at the foot of a beech, where only greenest moss and silky grasses grow, I held the yarrow blossoms to my nose until myt lungs were filled with the subtle odor that revived all my waning energies. It is not a summer scent that recalls June roses or the A Foretaste of Autumn 51 blossoms of fruit-trees. It is heavy, rich, penetrating; a nut-like, oily, autumn odor that charges the landscape; a transporting perfume that blots out the present and piA- ures the future without its blemishes ; gives us the spirit of autumn and veils its frost- scarred body. The bloom of the yarrow is as potent as the fruit of the fabled lotus. Has not the landscape changed? It is August, and the first day of it, too, and yet, with yarrow blossoms in my hand, I do not see so much of summer as I did. The tow- ering shellbarks that like sentinels stand out upon the meadows, the hill-side walnuts, the wayside chestnut, and even the shy hazel- bushes hidden along the wild brook's weedy bank, — all these must be ladened with ripened fruit, I fancy. It is crisp 06lober, with its painted leaves, to-day, not August ; such is the magic of the yarrow bloom. Is it all fancy ? What I did not see before is plainly set before me now. There on that gnarly sour-gum tree, scattered all over it, from topmost twig to its lowest trailing branches, are bright crimson leaves. That surely is a sign of autumn. No frost-ripened foliage, later, will shine with greater glory. 52 A Foretaste of Autumn and beyond, where the rank weeds have held their own against the cropping cows that have tramped through them all summer, is that wealth of dull gold, the trailing dodder, a gilded web of a gigantic spider, — the one with purple legs, perhaps, that we saw not far off this very day. This, too, is an au- tumnal plant in its suggestions : its color like the leaves of oaks and beeches when the cool nights come. So much in this world is what it suggests rather than what it really is! With what horror would we look upon the world if it was merely fads jumbled and tumbled together like a load of bricks dumped from the cart. I have in mind such an un- fortunate who is zealously digging for what he supposes is never upon the surface. Never a pebble but is a pebble only to him and not a water-worn fragment of a great rock forma- tion. And what, after all, are these naked fads to him who cannot use them? My friend has hedged himself in with fads. He has built a stone wall about him that his ignorance cannot stray, and in such a funny predicament he poses as an apostle of wis- dom. No fads without fancy, if you please. They will do to dash out your brains with. A Foretaste of Autumn 53 but rather let death come uninvited, and every fa6l remain clothed and in its right mind of fanciful interpretation. It is a safe course, for no healthy fancy ever yet proved seriously mistaken; but what of many a dealer in naked fads ? How true this is of birds! There are anatomists who map the wrinkles on a bird's bones, measure their eggs, and write learned essays on browny-white and whitey-brown, who are all impatience when an amateur speaks of a living bird. The professionals are never mistaken, oh, no ! but they only tell us half the truth. They are content with their soulless anatomy, and let them ; but the despised amateur has another mission, and long before the crack o' doom, if not now, will be held in higher esteem than many an over-presumptuous, self-elected, carping pro- fessor of avian anatomy. The almanac gives me no concern when I flourish yarrow-blooms about me. My nose is on duty, not my eyes, to-day, and why have this much-negleAed sense of smell if we put it to no better use than as a guide to lead us from unpleasant places ? How few people deted the subtle odors distilled by 54 A Foretaste of Autumn nature in every field and forest, by the wide river or its skirting meadows! Yet these odors are full of significance the student can- not afford to overlook. They are many and marked and full of meaning. If I were blind, I think I could make many a clever guess as to the "date and, perhaps, the time of day. Much is lost if we are sensitive only to the malodorous waves of tainted air that at times cross our paths as fleeting shadows dim the bright light of day. I take my fill again of the fragrance of yarrow, and in doing so anticipate the coming autumn. Much of the prosy side of life is given over to anticipation. Why not some of its pleasanter phases ? There is little real attractiveness in an August day. It is the old age of summer, and not a very vigorous, cheerful old age either. Did I look straight before me and see nothing but a green land- scape bathed in dreamy sunshine, I should grow as stolid as these huge trunks about me are sturdy and unmoved. The yarrow sug- gests the changes that are coming; as if Autumn in advance had stored her sweetness in this wayside weed, and so it is autumn to all my senses. The eye and nose have led A Foretaste of Autumn ^^ me until now, and now my ears. catch faint|^ far-ojGF sounds, as if I heard lathe, distance Autumn*sjight footsteps. Mere fancy counts for nothing now. It is not one sound sug- gesting another, but the real thing. The thrushes of the early morning have long been silent, the catbirds are not complaining, the wood peewee is even too busy just now to sing, and so it would be silent here were there not noisy nuthatches overhead. They are climbing over the rough bark, and as they peep into the innumerable crannies they are chattering incessantly. This is a wholesome autumn sound, heard often when its only accompaniment is the dropping of dead leaves ; and yet this August day it over- tops all other sounds save the rapid rush of water over the pebbles and boulders in the bed of the brook. We must close our eyes to realize the full significance of these autumn notes of resident birds. The landscape mpst rest on our memory, and not upon the retina. That querulous refrain belongs to drearier days than these, even to November and its fogs and pitiless rains. It is an all-pervading sound then, and fits well with the surround- ings, and the August sunshine to-day does 56 A Foretaste of Autumn not shat off the fog and rain when I close my eyes and listen to the nuthatches over- head. Bat other birds pass by, birds that have learned all the merits of my lifelong haunts and keep me company throughout the year. [There in the near-by thicket is that never-failing source of cheerfulness, the Caro- lina wren. When the world wore its most deserted, worn-out look, last winter, this wren came every morning and sang a new soul into the wasting skeletons of every weed. The bare twigs trembled with the joy of a new-found faith, that spring would surely come again and clothe them anew with bright green leaves. When early summer's tuneful host fills the warm air with melody, we are all too apt to forget the brave winter birds ; but, happily, they do not forget them- selves?] It was so to-day. The wren found the world too quiet for its fancy and awoke the sleepy echoes. It sounded a challenge to all drowsiness and banished noontide naps from the hill-side. Like the odor of the yarrow, it called up other days, another sea- son with its wealth of fruits, and how the nuts and apples of Odtober fell about me as I listened to its wonderful song, the same ■ iiir riMii— Ml m aiB^aiiMii*''!""' ^nn"' <> I - ■ j m uti/i^tttUUmt A Foretaste of Autumn 57 that I have heard these many years, when the thrushes have departed and not a warbler is left of the nesting host that thronged the blossoming orchard. However sultry the midsummer day, a whiff* of yarrow carries us forward to the coming coolness of September mornings. However quiet the midsummer moon, let but a single note fall from a winter songster, and frosty OAober is spread about us. LJn short, if we have not smothered our fancy in our rage for h&s, be summer what it may, it never conceals from those who know where to look the secret of conjuring up at will delightful, reviving, faith-sustaining fore- tastes of autumn.*] ^ I INDIAN SUMMER GOSSAMER and old gold ; brown leaves^ bleached grasses, and gray twigs ; green pines, that now look black in the distance, and frost-defying mosses ; such are the salient features of this bright November day. I am in a new country and at every step am met by strangers, but I know their cousins that are dwellers with-me on the home hill-side. To feel that I am a stranger robs the world of half its beauty. I cannot rid myself of the repressing thought ; but, if a stranger to- day, I am fortunately alone, and that com- pensates for much ; alone to-day in a wild- wood road, and it is now Indian summer. It is a long, narrow roadway, with a deep ditch on each side and no special side path for the pedestrian. It is assumed by the travelling community that two vehicles never meet, and the man on foot who meets a wagon must jump into the thicket that hems 58 .' — » y - Indian Summer 59 him in or be run over. So it seemed, at least, until the unexpe6led wagon did appear, when I found the problem might be solved by climbing over, but I preferred jumping, the ditch, and did so. The teamster, as he passed, hailed me with "What you lost?" and set me down as a liar when I told him "Nothing." No one could be in such a place without an errand, so he thought, and I had no gun to suggest the hunter. But I had an errand, and before the day was done found I had lost much in not having come to this wildwood road years ago. Thoreau has said, ** Nature gets thumbed like an old spelling-book," but by how many ? Carry fringed gentian to town, and by the gaping crowd you will be thought to have plucked it from some garden enclosure or found a hothouse door unlocked. I am sur- prised at Thoreau's remark the more because my path has so seldom led me among these asserted familiars of the out-door world. On the contrary, how all-prevalent is ignorance and unusual is earth-knowledge ! To be of the earth earthy is beyond question pre- eminently desirable, and yet how generally we study to keep clear of it, lest the black / \ t t I I 60 Indian Summer soil may spot our clothing, or, sinking deeper, stain the immaculate whiteness of our igno- rance. Nature is like a spelling-book, as Thoreau has suggested, but put our spelling- book in the hands of a Hottentot and what does he find ? We are too generally Hot- tentots in this regard ; adepts at misinterpre- tation, or, fearing a lurking devil in every shadow, huddle in the glaring light and dis- tort every straight line and rob of beauty every one with a graceful curve. The pages of nature's spelling-book may be smeared, rumpled, and dog's-eared, — too often they are, — but how often are they seriously stud- ied ? We hold it upside down, or study the title-page and turn away, posing as philoso- phers. It is well to dig, but all the bones in a quarry will not make a naturalist of you if they are merely bones, and the mind's eye cannot see them reclothed in the flesh. This is thumbing the book and never learning to spell even a-b, ab. So far Thoreau was right. But this is Indian summer and no time to preach or grumble, but to meditate. This golden renaissance will teach you a great deal upon one condition : you must be passive and let the knowledge come to you. Indian Summer 61 Indian summer is timid. Her efforts to re- clothe the earth with gladness are not free from doubt. Every ray of reviving sunshine is on the alert lest it be attacked by lurking north winds. Few birds in November sing with a May-day confidence, but they do sing, and this passing hour I have seen seventeen different species of birds, and, except in two cases, several individuals of each species, and not for one second has there been silence. At least the crows were to be heard, and what a hearty, whole-souled chatter theirs is ! The subjedl under discussion by them is sel- dom to be determined, but now they are scolding at a hawk that has sailed by, and it heeds them but little. A mere dip of the wing and this master of flight is above or below its tormentors, or, with a quick move- ment of both wings, it rushes far beyond the crows, and now is heard a wild, triumphant cry that thrills me to the very finger-tips. But not all the world's life is now in the upper air. There are birds as much at home in the bushes as are hawks in the clouds, and I turn to them at their invitation, but as quickly bid them adieu when sounds that smack of novelty fill the air. The genial 62 Indian Summer sunshine has warmed the quiet waters by the wood road^ and all the chill has left the broad patches of gray-green sphagnum, and now the chorus of a hundred frogs recalls the like warm days of early April when I wan- der to the meadows. I can scarcely detefl these frogs, however closely I look. They still cling suspiciously close to mother earth, but from their doubting throats rises a thanks- giving that floats away like a misty cloud and dies in the silence of the upper air. Again and again I hear it, and then the trembling leafless twigs and rattle of frost- defying leaves gives warning that the sun- shine has met its old enemy, the wind, and the frogs sink back to their hidden homes. Were it not for floating masses of thick, white clouds that shut out the warmth for the moment there would be even more contin- uous sound these late autumn days. Every- thing seems to depend upon it. I have often noticed how quickly a bird will cease to sing the moment it is in the shade and how promptly it resumed its song when the bright sun-rays fell upon it. It is really, I think, a matter of warmth rather than the amount of light, but during uniformly cloudy days there Indian Summer 63 is less disposition to sing than when the weather is bright. In short, take the year through, it is a matter of silence in shadows and melody in the sunlit air. While still lingering by the wayside pool and watching a slight ripple on the still surface, a turtle popped its head above the water and gazed about in every diredlion. I made no motion and so passed for a stick, one of the many hundreds about me. What it thought of the outlook is a matter of doubt in my mind, but following so soon after the chorus of re- awakened frogs, it doubtless wondered what all that noise was about, and looked at the world with its own eyes, to determine the truth of the matter. Perhaps it set the frogs down as liars, for the turtle quickly disap- peared, and, though I waited long, saw it no more. It was a short-long journey that I went to- day ^-short as the crow flies ; long if meas- ured by its wealth of suggestiveness. This swamp, that I would covered thousands of acres, is but a matter of a few hundred, and these will soon be drained, deforested, and despoiled of all its nature-given glory. It is an idle fancy to suppose it foreknows its 64 Indian Summer doom^ bat so lavish was k of all its beauties it seemed as if kopefal that its brave showing would prove effeAual to its preservation. Bright color is not solely a feature of summer or of early autumn leaves ; I found it in this solitary swamp, where every leaf had fallen. Bitter-sweet, fruit laden and so fiery red that the air seemed to glow with heat about it. The summer long this plant had been an un- pretending vine, that mingled its green leaves with the common crowd of rank weeds, and gave no hint of its superiority. In the fast and furious struggle for supremacy while the warm days of feverish sunshine lasted, it was content to slowly build for the future, and not then and there exhaust itself in merely overtopping its neighbors, and what of the sequel ? Now£in these glorious mid- November days, these bird-full, musical days of misty sunshine and rejuvenating warmth, the vine, that had so long been overlooked, is the chief glory of the roadside.l THE EFFECTS OF A DROUGHT FROM July 6 to Odlober 31, 1895, both inclusive, a period of one hundred and eighteen days, there were but seven during which brief showers occurred, no one ex- ceeding one-tenth of an inch of rain ; and there were four days when there was pro- longed, heavy precipitation, not exceeding in any instance seven-tenths of an inch ; and three days, or parts of twenty-four consecu- tive hours, when fog condensed and a drizzle, or ** Scotch mist," prevailed. The more prolonged rains occurring Sep- tember 26 and Odlober 13 caused little brooks, that had been dry for several weeks, to **run" for forty-eight hours, but there was no freshening of the weeds or grass on either upland or meadow. About our door- yards and along the headlands, even where shaded by rank weed-growths and the fences, s 65 66 The Effects of a Drought the ordinary grass was brittle, brown, and resting flat upon the earth. Before the be- ginning of September the landscape had a scorched appearance, this applying also to the foliage of several species of deciduous trees. By this time, too, the last trace of surface moisture had disappeared from the ordinarily wet or " mucky" meadows. During this time, even at its close, I did not notice any appreciable diminution of the volume of water flowing from the hill-side and meadow-surface springs, although 1 learned that many wells had partly or wholly failed. But, in all cases save one that I ex- amined, the water did not pass over its usual course and join ordinarily permanent brooks, and through them reach the river. The extremely dry ground immediately about the springs absorbed the entire outflow at greater or less distances from their sources. Of course, near the springs there was the usual luxuriance of aquatic and semi-aquatic vegetation, and, what is of interest to the Zoologist, an abnormal abundance or over- crowding of animal life in these oasitic areas. The continued presence of animal life de- The EfFects of a Drought 67 pends upon the food-supply. It is equally evident that no form of animal life can sur- vive for any protraded period an absence of moisture. During the prevalence of the drought heavy dews doubtless afforded a suf- ficiently copious morning draught to slake the thirst for a period of twenty-four hours, and so met the needs of small mammals, as mice and shrews, and birds, like sparrows, but ordinarily these same creatures drink much oftener than once a day. But this briefly moist condition of the dawn and early morning hours was not of itself sufficient to keep the wide range of animal life in health or comfort, and the result was a migratory movement from the drier uplands to the moister meadows ; a noticeable depletion of the fields and overcrowding of the marshes. This was not suddenly brought about, but rather gradual, and would not probably have been noticed except by one daily upon the scene. The parched vegetation had, of course, its effect upon seed-eating birds, but probably a more marked one upon inseft life. Certainly the insedl-eating birds left their old haunts to a great extent and were found in unusual abundance along the two creeks that 68 The Effects of a Drought divide the meadows into three great traAs ; and it was noticeable during the evening that bats and night-hawks were more abundant over the meadows than the fields. Mice and hares certainly were unusually scarce in the uplands. Here> it should be remembered^ no observations were pradli cable that gave positive results. No census could be taken of the life in the two localities, and every statement is one of general impressions gained by almost daily visits to the more im- portant points. One unquestionable fa£l was ascertained : there was an unusual abundance of life of every kind in the lowlands, and a quiet, desolate condition of the fields above, wholly different from what obtains in ordi- nary summers. As the weeks rolled by, the smaller meadow streams failed entirely, and hundreds of acres of land, usually more or less wet the year through, became as dry, parched, and desert-like as the sandiest field in the higher ground. Aquatic and semi-aquatic plants withered and died. The rose mallow failed to bloom, arrow-leaf wilted, and the pickerel weeds were soon as brown as sedges. This condition necessitated a second migra- tory movement of many forms of life, but The Effects of a Drought 69 was fatal to others. Such creatures as took refuge in pools found when too late their means of escape cut off* and perished. Small minnows, young salamanders, and even aquatic insefls gradually succumbed, and their dried remains were found resting upon the parched mud, which became quite hard, sustaining an ordinary foot-press without re- taining any mark thereof. Lifting the mum- mified remains from their resting-place, there were found impressions of each, distindl in almost every feature. It was instrudtive as showing how fossils are formed, and further so, in indicating how animals not associated in life become accumulated in small areas. In one such dried-up pool I found a mouse, a star-nosed mole, and remains of many earth- worms, as well as fish, batrachians, and in- sefls. Just why the mouse and mole should have remained there and died can only be surmised. But, to return to the uplands : a more striking instance of the efiedls of the drought was to be seen in a small stream known as Pond Run. This is fed by scat- tered springs ; is a stream of perhaps an average depth of six inches and a width of two or three feet. Sudden dashes of rain yo The Effects of a Drought swell the volume of waters, but this accession is as rapidly run off. In ordinary summers the volume is reduced to considerably below the estimated average measurements, but the stream has seldom before been known to be absolutely dry throughout its course. For a period of five weeks the water from the springs along its valley were insufficient to give it running water, and in many cases there was no perceptible moisture at the fountain-heads. As the water gradually dis- appeared, that portion of the stream's fauna dependent wholly upon moisture — as fish, turtles, and batrachians— coUeded in the pools, particularly those beneath bridges, and there, by overcrowding, soon poisoned the water, to which no fresh supply was being added. It might be asked why these ani- mals, except the fish, did not seek other and healthier localities, but the reason is plain. Everywhere about them was an arid region exposed to a tropical temperature into which they did not dare to venture. Again, while lingering in the pest-holes into which they had gathered, they had gradually undermined their strength and were too weak to travel when, if ever, it occurred to them to do so. The Effects of a Drought 7 1 And now back to the meadows. The last general migratory movement was to the tide- water flats, and here, of course, the moisture and vegetation were unaffedled, and I have never seen so crowded a condition as that in which were many of the streams that were never quite dry at even the lowest stage of the tide. The carnivorous fishes waxed fat, for there was an available minnow ever in front of every pike, perch, and bass ; and the grasshoppers, driven to the creek banks, where alone there was green herbage, were continually leaping into the stream, and were snapped up before they could reach the op- posite shore. There was here, however, not such an accession of batrachian life, frogs in particular, as might have been ezpedled, and I failed to notice any undue number of the mud minnow (Umbra Hmt). This fa£l led me to make a few examinations of the parched or semi-desiccated areas. I found in two locations, that I had never before known to become dry, that frogs, of three species, and the mud minnow had buried themselves where there still remained moist- ure, but with a crust of dry earth above it. These frogs and fish were like hibernating 72 The Effects of a Drought tnimals when ezhamed, — i.e., soundly asleep, rather than dead, and all slowly revived when placed in clear, cool water. I estimated that they had been in their cramped quarters for at least three weeks. Two weeks later, I hunted for others, but failed to find them ; but the day after the first prolonged rain I found the mud minnows in their usual abun- dance in this same brook, which now had about one-half its ordinary flow of water, and the frogs were dozing on the banks and leaping into the stream as unconcernedly as if nothing unusual had occurred. Possibly the above simple narration of certain fafts may seem to be of no special interest or importance, but there were two features of it that do not appear to have been treated of in general natural histories : the self-inhumation of the fish and frogs and the wonderful promptness of the return of life to the temporarily depopulated areas. It does not seem unreasonable to suggest that as long as these inhumed animals could retain their moisture they could preserve their lives. Both the frogs and this one fish can withstand prolonged deprivation of food. I have tried the cruel experiment in one in- The Effects of a Drought 73 stance^ and a mud minnow had no food for seven weeks> and had only lost two-fifths of its weight when it died. As this is a period longer than the duration of any drought on record^ when fish-sustaining streams were aflually dry^ it goes to show that this species is better prepared than any other to accom- modate itself to certain geological changes when they come about. Curiously enough, the mud minnow looks more like a fossil than an ordinary brook minnow, is the sole representative of its genus, and is the only species of fresh-water fish found in both Europe and America. While the drought destroyed much life, it more largely deported it, and I have, in many years of wandering about my home, seen nothing more positively wonderful than the promptness with which every nook and corner was repopulated when the autumn rains came. Vegetal as well as animal life responded at once. The fish were promptly in the brooks, the aquatic salamanders under the flat stones, and the frogs in their places ; and on many an afternoon of sunny Oflober days I heard their croaking, as if thankful for the return of the old-time conditions. 74 The EflFects of a Drought During the sammer of 1896, there was a more tbandant precipitation during the months of June and July, and the area de- scribed in the foregoing pages was not so soon affeAed by lack of water ; but the an- nual drought, though delayed, came at last, and I was, of course, curious to note its effedb and compare notes with the preceding summer. Herein I was disappointed, for, to all appearances, there had been going on an- ticipatory movements on the part of the same forms of life observed in 1895; and before the upland brooks and swamps were dry, and only the margins of springs were constantly wet, all animal life had sought the tide-water areas, where the evil effe6b of drought could not reach them. I found no fish entrapped in pools without outlets, or a single sleeping, mud-encased frog or minnow. The general aspe6l, zoologically, of many an upland trad^ was that of an " azoic" desert, suggesting that no living creature had ever been here ; and, truly, there is no more melancholy sight than the dry bed of a brook which for ten months of the year is the scene of a6Uve life in endless forms. I had rather wander among skeletons in an opened graveyard ^ ■iPiM' - - .-• oi •*■*• ■^ ■*""- The Effects of a Drought 75* than take my outing in the track of a de- serted watercourse. Nothing was gained by the comparison of the conditions of the one summer with the other, for it is beyond belief that the life that was discommoded by the drought really anticipated it. I suppose the change was more gradual than in 1895, and no form of life was caught napping. I should have made daily observations for more, than a month, walking ten miles every morn- ing and evening, and I did nothing of the- kind; and it is only by unremitting effort and an abundance of early morning courage that really valuable observations can be made. A leisurely outlook, at your convenience, may be very pleasant, but do not generalize upon what you see under such circumstances. To return to our subje6t : if the phenom- enon of a drought became an established con- dition, a migratorial movement from upland to meadow would soon become established ; just as every year there is a transitionary flight of sparrows of several species from the upland fields to the low-lying meadows. This is, I suppose, a question among themselves of food- supply, the crop of seeds failing in the fields first because there they are earlier to ripen. 76 The Effects of a Drought There was, however, one feature of the past summer that had peculiar interest. For eight days in August (5-12) we had the hottest ** spell" ever known. The thermo- metric readings have been higher in other years, but this is not everything : all the con- ditions are to be considered, the hygrometric especially, and in this instance it can be safely said that no record exists of continued heat when wild-life was so generally affe6led and the weather, as a whole, so nearly that of the equatorial tropics. As a whole, the cScGt of the heat, as I observed it, was a stupefying one. It produced a languor that while withstood by such wild animals as rabbits, mice, and chipmunks, made them inert and much more easily outstripped in a race. This was notably so in the case of the jumping, the short-tailed meadow, and the white-footed mouse ; not one of which, it may be said, is akin to the typical house mouse. In several instances, the land tor- toise, though it was sheltered by dead leaves and in the shady woods, was very noticeably indisposed to move about. In the range of my rambles there was a marked period of rest, as we may call it, from 10 a.m. to 4 The Effects of a Drought 77 P.M., that recalled the prolonged mid-harvest noonings of the farmer's help ; but, besides this, the heated term in question really affe6led wild-life throughout the night as well. Cer- tainly there was a marked difference in the aftivity of all furred creatures. The differ- ence in temperature between noon and mid- night did not always rouse even the flying- squirrels to their wonted no6lurnal a6tivities. If the temperature of those August days was prolonged to sixty or ninety days, and of regular occurrence, migration or aestivation would be brought about, — more probably the latter. Something akin to it can be traced, if our investigations are thorough, even now. Whatever may be its cause, the drought ap- pears to have become an established con- dition, but varying as to time, of each sum- mer. It is more marked now than a century ago, and the question arises. Is it the initial step towards a change of climate, to a wet and dry season, rather than the present dual condition of warm and cold ? A single entertaining incident relieved the scene of desolation, — for these strong terms are certainly applicable to a region affe6led by even this less prolonged drought of 1 896. 78 The Effects of a Drought I found a philosophical toad^ housed in a very unique fashion. Crows had pecked a hole in an early maturing watermelon and then turned it over in order that the seeds might fall out or gravitate to the opening, as the pulp of the melon slowly decayed. This is an old trick of these birds that is so in- genious that I am more than ever their friend in spite of the mischief done. A few melons less, but does the entertainment afforded by the birds go for nothing ? When I made the discovery there was little more than the wrinkled rind left, draped inside with an abundance of very red paper. The toad — a very old one from appearance — had taken up his abode in the melon, and to see him sitting at the door of his home, contemplating the drying up of creation, was extremely funny. Everybody that I brought to the spot had something to say about Diogenes and his tub, and I gave up all intention of writing on this subjeft. Diogenes was in everybody's mouth, even to high-school girl graduates of the cur- rent summer. That toad led to more display of classical knowledge than I had previously discovered in the conversation of my friends. I considered the toad from a purely zoologi- The Effects of a Drought 79 cal stand-point. The creature was in truth a philosopher. The sweet edges of the opening in the melon attra6led inse6ls^ and so the toad had food^ shelter, and a safe re- treat from the scorching temperature so asso- ciated that no physical exertion was required to meet all life's demands. WINTER.GREEN THE woods In winter are as thick with short sermons as ever in June thej are obscured by green leaves. The mercury fell to zero in the night and the ground is as a rocky yet I found an unfaded^ thrifty plant that made no sign of discouragement and looked up as confidently as violets in May. Winter-green ; and when so much is in the name itself, why say more ? A thrifty growth that defies the frost and adds its mite to the cheerfulness about it, whatever the con- ditions. How much winter-green breaks through our habitual crustiness ! Seen from afar, perhaps the old woods looked dreary ; but who ever fathomed the merit and merriment beyond a wrinkled face until circumstances led us to break through the restraining frown? To him who is a stranger to them, the woods in winter are forbidding. Advances cannot come from 80 Winter-green 81 them. Have they ever come from you ? I went into the woods this morning with a light heart because every old oak was a life- long companion, and the glinting sunshine was their smiles, and not mere glitter of the sun beyond. We lose in part our grip upon enjoyment when we cease to make believe, child-fashion. Seeing the winter-green, I fancied it was spring ; and then came mosses and greenbrier and the chatter of a squirrel. What, then, did it matter where the mercury went ? It might disappear without affefiing these pleasant February foretastes of what is near at hand. There was not a forbidding feature within sight; and while I dallied with the thread-like mosses clinging to the trees there came by that delightful songster of the round year, a Carolina wren* There was never weather so foul but this bird has a pleasant word to speak of it. It came, it sang, it conquered. There was neither cold, nor gloom, nor evidence of more cheerful days in time past, when the wren, perched upon a bending branch of spicewood, uttered all the happiness of its unchanging heart. That song could have held back the darkness. Had it, too, found the winter-green ? Stay ! 6 82 Winter-green Can it be possible that I heard the creaking of a rusty sign-board, and this Carolina wren was born of my inner consciousness ? Such a suggestion came recently from an ornitholo- gist ! What if the scales were to drop from my eyes, only to find that here in my home, on these old meadows, there never was a bird, and the region was In its primeval, azoic con- dition ? How the fellow would rejoice ! As for me, I am glad that the ornithologist's soulless birds, mere bones and feathers, keep away. I followed a narrow wood-path that led me into the very depths of the forest ; but green leaves were still about me, and now I heard a chatter as if some hidden friend were laughing at me, and the blue-jay and golden- winged woodpecker were near at hand and questioning me rather than I them« They, too, laughed at this zero weather, and the woodpecker tapped on the hollow branch of a primeval oak ; tapped and rattled with all his might, and then turned to me as if for applause. Then away to still more remote recesses in the wood, laughing all the while. I remembered the winter-green, and laughed, too. For a while, as I stood there, the woods Winter-green 83 were silent. I had a vivid impression for the moment that it was really winter and in- tensely cold. If I had suffered it would have been my own fault wholly, for he who truly loves an outing can keep all ugliness in the background. It requires no magician's wand. I looked again for winter-green and found it, and there, too, was the bush-nest of white-footed mice. I startled them from their snug retreat and gave chase, and, after a brisk dash through the underbrush, came off captor. Now, it is well at times to be as savage as ever was palaeolithic man, who lived Ages ago on this very spot, but stop this side of murder. Follow the game as closely, as persistently, as the hound follows the fox, but, at the final moment, offer the hand of fellowship rather than the fangs of destruc- tion. The former merely ends the chapter, with sweeter ones to follow ; the latter ends a tragedy of but one a£l, and leaves the sur- vivor unworthy of himself. I carried the captive mouse back to his home, but held him awhile before setting him down at his own door. What a gain it would have been could I have translated the glitter of his black eyes ! Was it fear or rage ? I judge 84 Winter-green the former^ for the poor thing trembled, and when I set it down it ran, not into its house, but to a prostrate log, and disappeared under dead leaves. I certainly had not gained its confidence, and when I come this way again it will not be caught napping. No matter how gently I move, it will never believe I did not intend it harm. Its first impressions, like our own, are stamped with indelible ink that will shine through the varnish of all subsequent experiences. Perhaps I dulled the winter-green for the day of that one mouse, but I had brightened my own. No incident, however trifling, should be lost upon us, and my pulses were thrilled with a healthier joy than the hunter had experi- enced, who had passed me by, laden with furs from his traps. The recent flood had worked destrufiion to the muskrats, and not a mink or raccoon or opossum but had fled from the drowned meadows. They were hiding in these woods, so the trapper told me, but I had not seen them. Not one of them but is more cunning than a mouse, but I do not know that they could have taught me any more had I met them in my path. They have not greater significance because Winter-green 85 of their size, and are too apt to rouse the savage instin£h that was the only impulse of primitive man. But I kept more upon the alert when again alone, and thought every scratch of the ground was the footprint of an animal. Not a bunch of leaves but moved as might a wildcat or a skulking coon. I had ceased to ramble and turned hunter, but the merriest of all our winter birds recalled me to my better senses. The crested tit whistled berei here! and looking up I saw green leaves upon the climbing smilaz, and looking down, winter-green was waving above fresh mosses that had not been fingered by the blighting frost. There was not a feature of the thick woods but wore a smile ; and that strange bird, by its magic, conjured up every songster within hearing, and jays, cardinals, kinglets, and chickadees came to the very tree upon which he perched. The old oak was an aviary, and what gladness rang through the old woods, which are said to be deserted and dreary even unto desola- tion in winter! Did I carry winter-green into the town, I would be told it came from a hot-house. Well, it did not come from the death-like regions of your supposition, a 86 Winter-green lifeless wood in winter. I never stw such a place. With the mercury at zero, there was still abundant life, abundant winter-green, abundant incident about which to ponder, as I pass down the long, varying line of days that make my changeful years.. THE WirCHERr OF WINDER *' TF a walk in winter is not simply 8tam« 1 bling over the graves of a dead sum- mer's darlings^ what^ V^^Y^ ^* ^' ^' ^^ some sach way ran the remark of a man who had seen our winters only from car-windows or those of his house on the city's street. It is not strange that he held such an opinion. Not even a sleigh-ride affords a fair view of the world in winter. We must be free to move if we would be free to see, and only when on foot and we have the freedom of the fields as well as of the highways can we know what winter really means, and by win- ter I mean weather that requires us to make war upon the wood-pile. Winter is the crystallization of a summer. A fixedness and quiet now replace the flowing river and music of the many birds that sang through- out its valley. Now are the days of slender shadows that streak the dull gray ground or 87 1 88 The Witchery of Winter send narrow lines of darkness over the un- trodden snow. The shades of leafy summer are shrunken. There are dimly lighted nooks where cedars cluster and crannies that are well defended by the frozen ferns^ but light is all-pervading, in a general sense, and how wide open alike are the fields and forest ! The opened door is an invitation to enter; but how slow are we to accept the invitation of winter, when the leafy curtains are with- drawn and the world more than ever open to inspedlion ! Are we to be forever afraid to look through the bare twigs to the sky above, lest we see the new moon barred by a branch and so tremble for our luck? The naked beam and rafter of Nature's temple are not desolate as the ruins of man's handiwork, for we know that their covering will be renewed in due season. Trees, indeed, in their un- dress uniform are none the less natural and forever retain their individuality. The wrinkles of their bark are their autographs, and we should learn to read them. But what is winter to me ? The brook, the leafless trees, the frozen grass, and all hungry life, whether bird or beast, protest, but I find no reason to complain. My The Witchery of Winter 89 needs are never many, and I have no sense of want when ** fiin in feathers," the crested tit, bears me company. We met this morning at the three beeches, and wan^ dered together down the wood road to the edge of the meadow. I have been walking here for so many years there is danger of repetition if I mention to-day; but no. Nature is never a repetition. The fault lies with ourselves if this is apparently true. Nature cares nothing for us, and we must force her to smile if we would be at all favored. The wind has other errands than to whistle for our amusement; no storm ever passed by on the other side because of our presence. All that we learn comes from our own efforts; we must wrest Nature's secrets from her ; she neither invites us nor volunteers any information. Every day has its own history, and the friends of yester* day are often more companionable to-day. Certainly my jolly, crested tit has gained since first we met, and now is nearer per- fefiion than ever before. I am sure of this, and yet much may be due to a clearer insight as to what a bird really is. Is my compan- ion bird ever convinced I have no weapon go The Witchery of Winter about me? Tame as he is, he never de- stroys the bridges behind him. I cannot quite gain his confidence. I fancy if some of us could see ourselves as birds see us, with what a sense of degradation would we be overwhelmed ! Seldom is it that we are not greeted, by every bird we meet, as a red-handed murderer. An exception to- day, however, for this jolly tit was socially inclined. He peeped over his shoulder as I drew near ; called out to me as I was about to pass by, and so we exchanged "good- mornings" as friend to friend. It is difficult to decide whether man or bird was really the leader, we kept so near together as we passed to the end of our woodland journey. It needs but some such incident as this to give us insight as to winter's real character* There can come no impression of death or desolation when, as we pass, we have birds hailing us from every tree-top, and is it not significant that our smallest bird, save one, braves our severest weather ? Yet we muffle ourselves in endless wraps and rush frantically from shelter to shelter when the mercury ranges low, as if the frost of a midwinter day was as fatal as some devouring flame.. The Witchery of Winter 91 There is t pretty outlook at the edge of the woods, and never more attrafiive than when the snow lightly covers the grass, and every tall rush and sedge and berry-laden bush stands forth in greater beauty because of the glistening background ; and here, red as our brightest berry, the cardinal shone on the bare twigs as the gayest midsummer blossom. Now here is wealth sufficient for any rambler's needs, and greater would prove an embarrassment. There can be too many birds at one time, as witness the warblers on May-day. You are easily lost in a crowd, but what is more charming than a quiet chat with a friend ? My crested tit had left me, but here was the kinglet still, and now a sprightly cardinal had come. He, too, is most excellent company, but how seldom disposed to be confiding ! The safety of a thicket must ever be at hand and never an instant that his eyes are not upon you. It is very humiliating, but though our meetings are always marred in this way, there is still abundant pleasure in them. To-day the cardinal whistled a wild note that ought to have waked the echoes in the sleepy hills, — a clear, fife-like call, as if it would rouse the 92 The Witchery of Winter slumbering trees and make the grass green again ; but the cardinal's magic reached me only, and I forgot that it was winter. There is a livelier thrill to every pulse- beat when saluted in such hearty fashion. We are of one mind, this cardinal and I, and agree that winter needs to be better un- derstood. Here at my feet is a frozen and forlorn fern, but it is green still, if it no longer waves gracefully as a feather in the passing breeze ; accept it for what it recalls to-day, and be not forever fretful because summer could not stay and protefi it. Every crisp, brown leaf that has fallen from the oaks has its own story to tell. Have you listened yet to know how charming it really is? Here among them, too, are acorns in endless numbers, — large and small ones; brown, green, and mottled ones. Here, where squirrels have been feasting in the cheerful warmth of winter sunshine, I, too, can find comfort, even playing with acorn- cups for an hour, and so again a child. There is no cause for discontent in a winter that merely sports with the tip of your nose or stiffens your ears. Are you going to retreat at such an assault, and, showing a The Witchery of Winter 93 white flag, hurry to the fireside? Such winter days ought to bring out one's true self, and just so far as the weather is hearty be the same. Meet it half-way, and what we should fear of it will never come to pass. Winter finds us such easy prey that it reaches the heart. Summer there, and you are well armed. Neither the winter of each return- ing year nor the stealthy winter of age can, thus armed, ever claim you captive. But let Nature preach ; it is not man's forte. No sermon fits the sunshine of a clear December day other than one of its own reading ; and the frozen meadow can speak diredUy to you, and will, if you are disposed to listen. There will be no waste of words, no rhe- torical flourishes, but a plain exposition of what is transpiring, and why. It is not always that we ask intelligent questions, and Nature is quite certain to resent the inquisi- tiveness of idle curiosity. The mystery of Nature is only the lack of our ability to comprehend her. Much of what is imputed to Nature as a mysterious quality is really a lack of brains on our own part. The frozen meadow was beautiful, but I lingered in the woods. There is a feeling 94 The Witchery of Winter of companionship when among old trees that is less pronounced among the weeds and grass ; a circle of the cle€t in one case» the common crowd in the other; but this is unkind to the honest weeds in the meadow. But I was not alone with the trees. I startled deer-mice that leaped in a bewil- dered way from their bird-nest homes» and what a tumult in a decayed log when I sent a great puff of smoke through the many tunnellings of the rotten tree-trunk now occupied by fat, lazy meadow mice ! — ^those that have the long runways in the grass and burrows besides, deep into the ground, into which they precipitately flee when too close pressed. It is only of recent date that I have found these creatures entertaining. They have hitherto been stupid and I have often passed them by without a second glance, but a touch of frost wakens them to a livelier pace, and then, as it was to-day, they are worthy game for the fun-loving rambler. When these mice sit up, with a berry in their forepaws, and look inquiringly about as you draw near, they have as much char- afler as any squirrel, and are very like the marmots of the far West in their general The Witchery of Winter 95 appearance, though infinitely smaller. Mice that make merry on the frozen grass and can squeak defiance to the prowling hawk are no mean feature of a winter outlook. And the hawk itself, — a pale-blue harrier that with matchless grace swept the weed- tops, — what a feature to any landscape ! I had been thinking well of the poor mice that fled in terror from me and made much of them for the time, but how quickly for- gotten were they in the presence of a hawk ! It is not strange, but is it wise to be thus easily led from the lesser to the greater obje£t? Rid yourself of preconceptions, and study both hawk and mouse without prejudice, and is there greater nobility in the feathers than in the fur? Is the com* manding murderer more to be commended and admired and copied than the murdered mouse ? If closely questioned we say ** no" to the bystanders, and yet we are as well aware as are our hearers that we are lying. In spite of all good intentions, we are for- ever following and applauding the tyrant in his feathers and forgetting the toiling mice in their furs. So, to-day ; so, yesterday ; so it will always be ; and the injustice of it flour- 96 The Witchery of Winter ishes as the weeds that we are ever scotching and never kill. The summer's heat and the summer's shade are gone» but the solid earth remains. The footprints of a ramble of long ago are still to be traced along this woodland path, and I stand in these again. The trees, the shrubbery, the hill-side and meadow, the winding creek and resistless river, are all still here,— changed, yet the same. Nor do I alone represent the life of this charmed spot. There are birds about me, — birds that whis- per glad tidings as they chirp near by ; birds that pipe a merry strain whenever the bare twigs rattle ; birds that scream their delight from cloud-land. In all that I see and hear there is no trace of the fault-finder's peevish moan. All is hearty ; all is cheerful. The world is accepted as it is, and it is no vain conceit to speak with confidence of the witchery of winter. COMPANY AND SOLITUDE I. "COMPANY." WHEN I was a child, there was no word in oar language more ex- pressive to me of all that was mildly terri- ble than "company.'' It meant unreason- able restraint, and the necessity of spotless clothing, a painfully stiff collar, and clean hands, — everything, in fa£l, that a small boy of average health and spirits naturally de- tests. Then, too, there was the showing off of infantile accomplishments, and a gen- eral disarrangement of every childish idea of comfort. I learned at five to detest ** com- pany," and at fifty I have not outgrown the impressions then acquired. I do not like company. Not that I am afraid of strangers, nor that, being a householder, I am inhospi- 7 97 98 Company and Solitude table ; but " company" — well» I am at a loss to express my real meaning. I remember an old neighbor, an uncoath creature, a con- temporary of my grandfather, who was ac- customed to declare that a brief call was a •* vis," to spend the day, a visit, and to stay overnight, a visitation. This may not have been original with him, but it was a pithy way of putting the matter, and has been my law and gospel on this subjefl ever since. Of what earthly use is ** company" ? You probably see your neighbors once a week, meeting them on the public highways, and if you nod pleasantly, and speak a word or two of the weather and of the health of the family, has not everything been done that necessities require or formality can reason- ably demand ? If you have business or need information that others can give you, go and ask of them. Be brief, but to the point, and, leaving with what is desired, carry away also their blessing. To go to another's house, to request of its inmates, one or all, to sit for half an hour or longer and listen to your platitudes, and, coming away, lie to them about a pleasant call, is intolerable. Yet there are thousands who do this daily. Why Company and Solitude 99 should I leave my occupation, be it loafing even, and give my attention to some man or woman who is thoughtless enough to " call" ? The afbiating motive never appears. Much is spoken and nothing said. I receive no worthy thought to profit by or increase the probability of a beatific eternity. The famil- iar well-gnawed bones of dodrine fall from the devil's table. Usually I am forced to breathe, at such a time, a gossip-poisoned atmosphere. This " call" is another's idea of civility, and I am compelled, it appears, to be a victim of his or her whim. If I refuse, as I have done point-blank, to present myself, I am called a boor and all manner of ugly names. Well, is it not better to be called black as night, and know that you have the whiteness of mid-day in your heart, than to be called civil, while you are cursing the thoughtlessness of the company that has called ? That is my view of the matter. The world professes to hold in righteous indignation a hypocrite ; but how are we to escape hypocrisy if we become the slaves of company ? It has often been said that the set phrases of formal social customs are un« derstood by everybody and no harm is done. lOO Company and Solitude Perhaps so, but I am concerned more with the harm I do myself than with that I cause to others. If I have one possession above another that I value, it is my time, my living, my concerns with myself; and there is no surplusage to be bestowed upon formalities that bring neither pleasure nor profit and do not redound to my credit in any way in which the subjefl can be looked at. I insist that there is nothing churlish in this view. I have not those in mind whom I call my friends, but the average caller, the ** com- pany'* that is dying — but, alas, never dies — to know what your most secret thoughts have been that day, so that he or she may an- nounce them to some other viflim of his or her calling list. This is not evidence that I am averse to a lively chat over the fence with my next-door neighbor, nor that I do not love to discuss old times with a former playmate when we meet. All such occur- rences — and they have an added charm when happening by chance — are delightful and of quite another charafler : they are as honest, outspoken, and hearty as that sweetest music in the world, the laughter of childhood. The frankness of a pleasant meeting is as Company and Solitude loi refreshing and soul-satisfying as the formali- ties of '' company" are arid and degrading. We had company to-day. I was asked for, — as if one viftim were not sufficient, — and, as often happens, declaring I would not appear, appeared. Luckily my memory was in working order, and I put it to a severe test. Now, an hour after the plague had ceased to trouble by its presence, the soft, sibilant, loud whisperings remain. The company took just fifty minutes to inform me that I was looking well; that I was looking extremely well ; that I never looked better. Pleasant sounds, doubtless, are such words to those who are really ill, notwith- standing their inapplicability; but I am in ordinary health. I was also told that the weather had been unpleasant, very unpleas- ant, positively disagreeable; and, as I had not been house-bound for a month, this was scarcely complimentary to my powers of observation. All the while, I never opened my lips, unmoved by madam's black looks, which I interpreted aright. The company were persistent, and attacked me from an- other quarter : Did I think we should have pleasant weather soon? I remained silent 102 Company and Solitude for a moment, and was about to reply, when another question was put : Will there be a pleasant summer ? This was somewhat stag- gering. How was I to know the chara£ler of the coming season ? I smiled, hypocriti- cally of course, and replied that I hoped for pleasant weather in the next world, but did not dare to prophesy as to this. The fools tittered. I supposed I had scored a success at meeting formal company, and was heaving an inaudible sigh of relief, when the guests rose to depart; but it seems that my part was not well done, and madam scolded me for rudeness. I am convinced, now, that I cannot become a successful formalist, and I understand that our callers agree with this. They call me a boor and other significant names; but then, out of the parlor I am abundantly happy, and doubtless my days will not be shortened by my lack of appre- ciation of their valueless inanities. Is it, seriously speaking, necessary for one to part company with a bird or a flower, to leave the open air for a stuffy room and miss music and beauty, that a caller may have opportunity to assure you that two . and two make four? Even if the caller has knowl- Company and Solitude 103 edge — ^his alone, it may be — that he is will- ing to impart* how is he to know that I will value it ? It may be that I am wrong, — that such a course, if general, would check the world's progress ; but I am not convinced. Who, indeed, are those that have furthered progress so far, — the chattering gad-about, the caller, our ** company," or those who value their time and are not willing to sit idly by and be talked at by anybody and everybody who happens to call ? •An honest meeting of man with man is usually an accidental one. Often, seeing them approach, for the lane is long and straight, I have hastened to the hill-side, to be rid of the obnoxious callers. Here, if in summer, I let the songs of thrushes entertain me, or, in winter, listen to the titmouse, that is always cheerful, or watch the long lines of roostward-flying crows. I have never yet wearied of this, or found such conditions to lose their suggestiveness. When to-day's company had gone and madam's ledture was ended, I hurried to the farm's most unfre- quented corner and rested at the mossy stile, over which so few pass these later years, for the once well-worn foot-path is now torn 104 Company and Solitude yearly by the plough. While I tarried, I was hailed by a hearty man who lives close to nature. "Have you heard the eagles scream to- day ?*' he asked. •* No," I replied : ** are there any about ?" " Do you think I would ask you what I did, if it was an impossible thing ?" he re- plied, with a trace of anger in his voice. I was deservedly snubbed. Here was a man who knew every nook and comer of the land, every tree, bush, flowering plant, beast, and bird; and to think that I should have expressed a doubt of his sincerity ! That trifling " company*' had been too much for me. I looked my regrets, and the old man read my eyes. " Yes," he said, in his usual earnest man- ner, " there was a grand pair of eagles here at sunrise, and they screamed until the hill- side trembled with their rage. They soared until out of sight, and then came swooping down until the tree-tops were moved by their wings, and all the time one or the other screamed till you would have thought their throats would crack. Not another bird along the hill-side opened its bill. It was as still Company and Solitude 105 as winter, till they were gone, miles down the river ; and then what a chatter the crows set up ! You might have thought they had driven the eagles off and were crowing over their vidorjr." This is such knowledge as I am ever ready to receive. I am always on the lookout for eagles, and my friend has been more fortu- nate than I. His wealth he is ready to di- vide, seeing it does not diminish by so doing. I am the gainer, yet he is not a loser. Such meetings make me thankful I am not alone in the world. But what had I to offer as an equivalent ? He had given me also of his time, which I knew was held at its full value by him, and was I to receive this as a gift ? I was humbled by the thought that I had not power to make adequate return, and would at least have admitted as much ; but my friend could read me as he did the wild world about him, and said, as he turned to leave me, ** You are glad to know that I have seen eagles to- day, and I am glad to be able to tell you." His recompense was the knowledge of having been of use to another. I had not thought of that. Such people have no time to call ; for them, there are no moments to io6 Company and Solitude be spent in formulating phrases that are empty; but meeting you while on their way, as here at the stile, they bless you with weighty words and leave you wiser than be- fore. We cannot ** keep" such company ; it is vouchsafed to no one as an every-day feature of his life ; but it may sparkle through his years, here and there, like flakes of gold in quartz. I have argued in this strain for years, find- ing no one to agree ; yet every year strengthens my conclusions. Of course, folks will not cease to ** call" until the crack of doom, and many will be on their way to their neighbors when they hear it. They hold themselves as philanthropic people, but I would that every one was to a greater extent misan- thropic rather. Speaking for myself, it is a positive pleasure, whenever I think of it, that I gfew up a savage. The plain, modest, and compadl flower of misanthropy has been too long negledled. Plant it where it will be most often seen, and let its blossoms in- fluence our lives to a greater symmetry. Company and Solitude 107 II. SOLITUDE. ** Distrust mankind : with your own heart confer. And dread even there to find a Batterer.** "The foremost objeA in my experience has always been the ninth letter of the alpha- bet," I remarked. "Then you are a crabbed creature, wrapped up in yourself," my companion replied. ** For once you have told the truth ; now leave me, please." What would this room be if there were others in it? Merely a very plain, bare- walled affair; a shelter, for it is raining now, and but little else. But luckily I am alone, and through the distorting panes of greenish glass, through which the light of sunrise in an earlier century penetrated, I look out upon a pretty world. I am alone, and the crowd about me hampers every movement; but did so much as a single human being open the door, and I should be io8 Company and Solitude alone in quite another sense. In what men call solitude I have all my friends about me ; when in man's presence^ all too often, I am literally alone. I fancy that all work of value or even of idle interest to the world is done in secret. We can praise or blame, admire or detest a crowded street ; but what we wish others to know must come to us and be recorded when the crowded street is a mere matter of mem- ory. The ghosts of the dead centuries can peep over my shoulders and peer from every corner of this little room without disconcert- ing me, but let some mortal in the flesh open the door and my thoughts are as far off as these same ghosts that but a moment ago were grinning at me and I grinning back at them. It is safe to love a ghost. Though there is a delightful individuality discernible, still they are much like the clay in the potter's hands: we can shape them within reason- able bounds. Exhilarating thought, too; I have not yet met a ghost that was not a gentleman. Of ghosts of the other sex I know nothing, having never seen one. The former are familiar, they are of easy man- Company and Solitude 109 nersy a little roguish at times, and a bit in- quisitive, yet never that terror of the flesh, obtrusive. Intuition never deserts the ghost. It reads your thoughts before it enters your presence, and knows to the second when to come and go. These jolly creatures are my best friends, and how can any one be alone when such company is ever at hand, asking no other condition than that your fleshly brethren shall keep in the background? I have accepted their terms, and so, while I love myself above all others in the worldly sense, and to all appearances am concerned with my own thoughts only, and my own whims and their gratification, yet my troop of friends — ^unseen by others' eyes — are always adually at hand or within the reach of an unworded wish. Is this not a fitting condition? What can be more ghost-like than an unspoken thought? It is not the less a fad because unseen and unheard. It may not travel to my neighbor and prod his brain to an addi- tional activity, but how quickly it flies to the surrounding outlook and beckons to me a dozen or a hundred ghosts and bids them attend upon me ! This makes a monarch of no Company and Solitude a thoughtful man. See to it that you are a merry monarch, and your happiness is assured. There is no one beside myself in this small room, and we are given to sele£ling the most prominent objedb when in search of subje£l-matter for book or essay, and both would often be the better were the minor matters more in evidence. The hero, how- ever great, must have ground to stand upon ; but this is often forgotten, and characters come and go in the printed pages as if such a little matter as the world at large was of no importance whatever. But to-night I am alone, and choose myself in preference to others, if I find anything to say. I do not obje£t. That ninth letter of the alpha- bet always appealed very strongly to me. It is like a cherished personal possession, and whatever may be my occupation at the time, or wherever I happen to be, this same blessed / is the most prominent feature of place or circumstance. Whether or not any- thing to yoUy I am everything to myself. The ninth letter and the writer are nearer than twins, — we are one, — and never was there a closer relationship or one that was Company and Solitude ill unruptured by disagreement or marred by misunderstanding. Whatever the limits of my knowledge, I know myself. What the world is, what life is, can only be judged by me through my senses. What you tell me really means nothing. I see with my eyes, hear with my ears, touch with my hands, and distinguish odors with my nose. Your ex- periences can be nothing to me, except as I compare your report of them with my own impressions. As you may say of yourself, I say of mine : wherever I am, there is the centre of the world ; and when I am alone, I am the only man in existence. If another's proximity is not made known to my senses, how may I know that you are still on the earth ? Your world may pass away and mine remain. What your world is it does not concern me to know; but my world does fill all my thought, and, projedting myself therein, am filled with its diredt impressions upon my senses, myself, — that entity which is most forcibly expressed by a simple let- ter, I. There would be less jangling in this world if individuals were given to placing more emphasis upon their own expressions, by 112 Company and Solitude continually reminding the hearer that it is himself who speaks^ and speaks only for himself. I think, I believe, I know ; good, wholesome expressions, these, that lead to no misconceptions. But it is claimed that exces- sive egotism is tiresome, is inelegant, is evi- dence of limited intelle£tuality. Well, it is honesty, it is truthfulness, it is the operation of your own mind, boundless or limited. We were better off, as prehistoric folk, when selfishness was a more marked feature of humanity. The mischief of egotism that has been claimed arises from misconception of self, the incurable malady of feeble minds ; of such as the law gives freedom at twenty- one, but which are truly infantile at three- score and ten. Have you encountered no such minds? Do not speak hastily. An affirmative answer is an admission that you are blind. To do ourselves justice, to fit us to our niche, so that no vacant space shows about us, we must be busy with ourselves, and de- mand to be excused when weaklings call for a division of our strength. I did not invite myself to this world. He would be a fool who should do that, if it were possible ; but Company and Solitude 113 here I am. The fa£t of the entity's presence is incontrovertible, and what does it mean ? I do not know. I do not care. No reason for existence ever became apparent, but in time the I within me comes to the fore and overshadows all other fads, and, concerned with it, I struggle to keep my footing on a slippery earth, and, doing so, the thought continually wells up. What of this earth about me ? Its multiplicity of details is be* wildering, ofttimes exasperating, and my own Ego has learned to shun the complex and seek the simple, to avoid the formal and clasp hands with the true. There is nothing pe* culiar in this, but the same end is sought by different routes or methods. Nobody really likes the shams of this world, and yet how much ground is planted in the undesirable crop ! How came such things into exist- ence ? The ever-growing complexity of the problem of human life has much to do with it, I suppose; perhaps all to do with it. The wandering away from a wholesome to a feverish condition of affairs, from the near- ness of nature to proximity with the unnatu- ral, has led to distortion, if not of body, of mind, and the asymmetrical growth resulted 8 114 Company and Solitude finally in the few being served hy the many ; the idle becoming the lords of the busy ; the rich, the tyrants of the poor. There are upturnings at times and healthful readjust- ments. So ugly as all this appears, it might be worse ; but the sham, the unreal, the ab- solutely false, these pass too often for the real, the beautiful, and the true, and the world does not seem aware that it is hum- bugged. The indifferent individual — the in- fant of mature years, so to speak — accepts pinchbeck for gold, rhinestones for diamonds, asking only for glitter, and indifferent to the source. The fools, unfortunates through Nature's design or indifference, can, and not infrequently, successfully pose as the favor- ites of Erudition, and, stealing others' labors, be credited with learning which they do not possess and awarded honors to which they are not entitled. The individual that by chance catches the expressions of those in distant lands and repeats them here as the outcomings of his own brain is all too com- mon. This is a diseased condition that has found a nidus in the overcrowded centres of the world. We have heard much of degen- eration of late, and a great hue and cry against Company and Solitude 115 the suggestion, but the world in some re- 8pe£ts is worse, not better, than it appears, and many an individual with a goodly ap- pearance is thoroughly rotten at the core. ** Who cares what you think, or say, or are P'' my neighbor asks. ** I do," I reply : ** it is I who is talking to myself." If you care to hear, listen ; if not, turn a deaf ear. I am not intruding upon your notice, nor desire to figure in your life even as a shadow crosses your sunshine and is gone. The truth is, you intruded. You broke the silence by your uncalled-for question. You asked me to speak, and, as usual, have only myself about which to converse. But while you tarry, let us be neighborly for a moment, and not, like wan- dering atoms in emptied space, kick each other into different diredtions. However wrapped up in one's self, we can be of mu- tual advantage. You can profit by my blun- ders ; I, by yours. The stornv increases in violence as night draws on apace, and I have now no ghosts to cheer me nor desire to call them up. Even ' they have sought shelter; and more than ever it is a fitting time to take down ** Wal- ii6 Company and Solitude den*' and read the fifth chapter. Thoreau was in the highest sense an egotist, and so, necessarily, a lover of solitude. This is not taking a pessimistic view concerning ourselves or others. Our limitations call for isolation that we may do ourselves justice, far more frequently than our supposed needs call for company ; and unless there is solitude at command and full confidence in our strength, we leave the world as we found it, so fiu* as our presence in it is concerned. Why we should care to have it otherwise is the most strange of all problems that vex our sojourn. It is a serious matter, making life less en- durable, to be plagued with ambition. Why I sit on a torturing four-legged chair at my desk when there is an easy rocker front of the andirons is not solvable : it is simply a fa£l, and an extremely disagreeable one at that. But existence becomes less serious if we can take pleasure in solitude and toy with the puzzles that Nature dangles in front of our faces. Such hours of existence gild a gloomy world ; but how few, like Thoreau, can extradt the sweets of a quiet evening and be honestly glad that they are living ! Some of his distinguished critics could not, or Company and Solitude 117 there would not be such wide-spread mis- conception of the man. To most of us he was, and will always be, an enigma, and the more so, in that petty spite on the part of greatness strove to misrepresent him. In face of such conditions do we ** knock our- selves down," as a writer recently said in pointing out the arrogance of one critic who presumed too much when he essayed to com- ment on such a subjed. Even a professional critic can get beyond his depth, and Lowell got far beyond his, and, worse than mere failure, he seems to have forgotten an earlier essay full of praise, and in the later screed failed to conceal the true animus that moved him. But all is well: Thoreau, the lover of solitude, the sane egotist, fills our lives more and more, and leads us to a better con- ception of the world about us. OVERDOING tHE PASt ARE we not overdoing history and neg- le6ling the present moment? Peri- odical literature is overflowing with dilu- tions^ more or less weak^ of the elaborate biographies of great men. There is no time allowed us to consider the living present because of the claims of a dead past. We have ceaselessly rung in our ears the wonder- ful doings of this or that hero : how he, being successful, saved his country ; how he, being defeated, the occurrence of continental disas- ter was prevented. This is all rank rubbish. The world is too powerful for any one man to absolutely control any important portion of it. Even the present Czar has his limita- tions. It is mere assumption to say that England would have crushed this country had the Revolution failed. We are taught to despise the Tories of 1776, but their argu- ments were worth listening to, and the loy- 118 Overdoing the Past 119 alist that doubted the loud-mouthed patriot- ism of Sam Adams was not wholly a fool. England^ later, would not have disappeared from the map of Europe had Napoleon gained Waterloo. There is no man living who can prove that the world was the gainer by the ad^ual results of the world's great contests. It is not impossible that we might have gained more had the opposite occurred. It is a matter of speculation only. What our forbears did, if delayed, might have been better done by their descendants ; and what they failed to do, believing it a terrible calamity, has never resulted in the direful conditions they predi6led. The world works on in a pretty even way, though millions of fretful creatures hurry to and fro as if its weight were on their shoulders. What the man of to-day exults over we may deplore to-morrow, and that condition of affairs over which he grieves to-day we may look upon to-morrow as a blessing. We overrate the importance of individualities ; we underrate the world in its entirety. We can draw endless conclusions from the lessons of the ^ past, but we cannot truthfully proclaim any one of them as a demonstration. We can 120 Overdoing the Past amuse ourselves with peering into the future, as the belated traveller peers into the darkness before him, but we cannot speak with accu- racy as to what we see. To return to current literature. Should we not concern ourselves more with what is daily transpiring, and less with what has been or might have been ? Is not the importance of history overdrawn when it is held up so closely to our faces that we cannot see what a bright world there is behind it ? Does it not begoggle our eyes so that the Present is robbed of its beauty? The value of history is unquestionable, but its overvaluation is a greater misfortune than that our yesterdays should forever be utter blanks in our lives. Then, too, the manner of these historical presentments is open to criticism. Their authors are too given to distort a fad for the sake of rhetorical flourish, and every pi6lure of their favorites — with- out one single exception — is painted in the most glowing colors. Their heroes verge on the angelic, and yet not one of them but was somewhere, somehow, at some time, miserably weak. The human frame is no fit cage for an angelic spirit, and the historical Overdoing the Past 121 essayists of to-day, that hint at such things as of the past, force Candor to exclaim. Lord, Lord, how this world is given to lying ! The corre6lion of all this is the art of appreciation of our immediate surroundings, and an avoidance, as of a pestilence, of de- pressing retrospediion. As it is the atmos- phere that is now entering our lungs that gives us life, so let it be the sights and sounds and deeds of the passing moment that give us joy. It is the rose on the bush this bright morning and the song of the wild bird that sounds across the fields, that bid me pause to look and listen. Two centuries ago my people saw and heard the same flowers and birds, but does such a thought really add to the present pleasure ? If you permit your- self to drift with the backward current of retrospe6lion, that moment you become blind and deaf, or catch but a fleeting glimpse of some poor ghost, or hear perchance the faint- est echo of some dead song. Why press your ear to the ground to fancy you deted the footfalls of preceding greatness ? What mat- ters it whether Washington's boots creaked or not ? Is there not more in the tramp of 122 Overdoing the Past the millions who are battling as nobly to- day ? It is not belittling the heroes of other days — and it matters nothing if it is — to claim for the present equally heroic men. The condition may not arise to bring them to the fore, but who shall say that they do not exist and merely wait the trumpet call of opportunity ? Never a hero fell^ but an equal was ready to replace him. What is a hero? A man equal to the hour's emer- gency^ and how many emergencies have not been met? No such pernicious twaddle finds its way to the printed page as the idolatrous laudation of those who have been borne to high places by circumstances they could not control^ and gazed upon by all mankind ; idolatrous^ and therefore degrading so far as it leads to the belief that among ourselves there is no such greatness ; that the glory of humanity waxed in this or that hero and has since been waning. " I cannot agree^'' says a friend. " It is the flindion of the daily press to devote itself to the man of the moment. But, for heaven's sake^ let us get a little respite from these ' a6lualities' when we pick up the illus- trated monthly magazines ! For my part« I Overdoing the Past 123 should like to have George Washington's life retold in each of the magazines in turn, and then retold again when the last of them had printed it. The value of keeping Napoleon always in evidence were perhaps less obvious. Stilly in those aspe6ls of his charader in which he was not an example, he was a tre- mendous warning. The day has not yet come when we can afford to let Washington sleepy or fail to profit by a study of Napo- leon's rise to di£bitorship." And, again, he says, "It does not appear whether or no Abraham Lincoln is one of your bites noires. There has been rather more about him in the magazines than about Washington or Bona- parte. To be sure, he has been dead only a third of a century ; but he is not one of those ' who are striving at this time to make our lives better worth the living.' Doubtless, though, his example is more potent for good than that of any living man. I should like to know what great and good man of to-day the magazines have negle6led, after all ?" I do not see that I am squelched by Brother Quill. My claim is that biography should be written for the benefit of the young just as much if not more than for the 124 Overdoing the Past dele£Utlon of the old. Nothing can im- prove or affed the latter ; and to make little gods of the dead is hurtful, because the living youth knows his own limitations and despairs becoming as good, say, as George Washing- ton, whereas it really requires but little effort to be quite as good and even considerably better. Mere eulogy and parade of transcen- dent virtue which the individual discussed did not possess is rubbish. Much of the current magazine matter is a sort of goody- goody biography that is not even pleasant reading, and surely not profitable because untrue, — that is, the fa£b are so stated as to give a wrong impression. What we want is applied biography, not a mere record of a man's sayings and doings ; a sele6lion thereof, with their application to the present day and its needs. Essays on charaders are better than detailed records of the lives of Tom, Dick, and Harry. My critic hopes to silence me by naming Lincoln. Is it not peculiarly true of him that we need a guide to the study of his career, and so make pradiicable the applica- tion of the secret of his success to our times? But does the ponderous pidlure-book, with a Overdoing the Past 125 portrait on every page, and even portraits of those whose back-yards joined the rear gar- den-lots of his first cousins, aid us any ? I admit that his example is still potent, though he has been dead for thirty years, but it is because there are thousands living who dis- tin6Uy remember him. Will his biographies, rewritten a century hence, as we now have George Washington doled out to us, help the young reader of one hundred years to come? Not a bit of it. It behooves us to consider our own steps more than the footprints of those who have gone on before. Give me the passing moment, not the dead past, and, too, let us think just a little less of the prob- lematical future ; it, if anything, is wholly fitted to take care of itself. Another of my critics says, " If there are any Washingtons or Lincolns about now, they keep themselves exceedingly close." They certainly do, and why ? Because there is not enough interest taken in the present to make them show forth what they really are. Now, this critic, like the other, is an editor, and so supposedly infallible ; but I doubt if either will deny that there are not men for the hour, whatever the charader of that 126 Overdoing the Past hour. The existent conditions produce the men required for them, and when the de- mand is for heroes^ heroes will stand forth. In the humdrum conditions of the present merely money-getting days^ of what earthly use would a Washington or a Lincoln be ? If they applied their talents to the present, as they did to the conditions of their times, they would inevitably take the fatal step from the sublime to the ridiculous. But this is base ingratitude, some one, having the Revolution in mind, cries out. These men fought and bled for our liberties. Let us think a moment. Is this charge of ingratitude as serious as it sounds ? How do we know the heroes of other days did any- thing of the kind ? They have left no record of great concerns as to their great-grandchil- dren. They did concern themselves with their children, for the latter were then very much in evidence ; but here is an ugly fa£^ that confronts those that talk of ingratitude. Never a hero but was concerned more about his own neck than about the necks of those to come after him. The men of troublous times, in years gone by, had their own im- mediate interests, and were necessarily moved Overdoing the Past 127 by personal considerations. In a certain sense they were selfish. What they felt called upon to do required courage^ but it was nothing reckless. They were shrewd. They ad^ed upon the outcome of calm con- sideration, choosing what they believed to be the lesser of two evils ; and it is sad to think that had not success attended our favorites, few of them all would be remembered from year to year. Much as we know, we have yet far more to learn, and this condition of ignorance, which dates from the appearance of man upon the earth, will remain until the last human being in the world stands wondering what is before him. This prosy fad binds us very closely to the present. We have, or ought to have, enough to do with the demands that each day makes upon us ; and what leisure is permitted us is most wisely spent in the study of what our contemporaries are doing. If they are outreaching us in any endeavor, we need greater energy and have less time to dream ; if they are outspeeding us, what do our own limbs need to give them equal agility ? We need the gold being dug to-day more than the speculations of archasoiogists 128 Overdoing the Past concerning prehistoric miners. The pearls that are concealed in the river mussels to-day are worth more than mere knowledge of the caves of Golconda. The past can claim, with reason, grateful remembrance on our part, but to continually dream over it, and worry even that we cannot unmake some of it, is worse than folly. It can afford us little aid, the world's conditions change so rapidly and radically, and he who, whether by a£ls or by suggestion, by example or the writing of a book, leads us to be up and doing, not prone and dreaming, does the world a service. Such a one becomes the successful general of a battle of farther-reach- ing consequence than he wots of. Whether heroes or the humblest of all humble folk, it is well to be up and doing,— caring less for the past and concerned more with the pres- ent. Make history, not idly worship that which has been made by others. Be not mere hero-worshippers, but content to know that, while we cannot all be heroes, no life is so lowly placed that it may not be heroic. DREAMING BOB I. ** One misty, moiity morning, When cloudy was the weatheri I met an old man All clad in leather.** Mother Go9st» THERE is often so little of real interest conne6led with the present that it is a genuine pleasure to meet with a person who can carry us back to times that had or seem to have had charms that now are lacking. We have lost all the links that bound us to the past century, and the first decade of the present one does not to so great a degree suggest '* ye good old times." Nevertheless, it was before coal was used as fuel, or steam as a motive power, and electricity was little more than a name. So ran my thoughts as I approached the old man who was walking to 129 130 Dreaming Bob and fro over a wet and weedy pasture and occasionally thrusting a long staff vigorously into the mud. He was so promising a specimen for inter- viewing that I immediately led off with a question which I hoped would lead to a pro- longed conversation. '*What are you looking for? a pot of gold ?" I asked. " Tortles." «« What kind of turtles ? land or water ?** I asked^ not feeling disposed to be snubbed, although that seemed to be the old man's purpose. "Mud,'* he growled, even more impa- tiently than before. " Are mud turtles good to eat ?" I asked. " No, nor to look at," he replied. *' Then what do you want with them ?" I asked, without showing a trace of annoy- ance. The old man now looked up, and, after staring at me for at least a minute, said, " Young man, do you own this ma'sh ?" " I do," I replied, with a smile. " Do you want me to go off?" he asked. *' Certainly not," I replied. Dreaming Bob 131 ** Then will you please let mc alone ?" he asked, still staring intently at me. " Ohy yesy if you wish it ; but I saw you were a stranger and an old man« and I like to talk to old people," I replied. "Why?*' he asked, in reply to my last words, with a slight change of tone indica- tive of a trace of amiability. "Because they usually tell me of days long gone by, and of customs now almost forgotten," I told him, adding, " Old people, whether they do or not, seem to know more than men of my own age, and do know more of old times, of course." " Umph !" grunted the old man, and then repeated the half-smothered ejaculation sev- eral times, looking, as he did so, towards the three huge beeches that towered above the other trees on the wooded hill-side near by. " I'm not as old as them beeches," he finally remarked. ** No, I should say not," I replied. " Then why don't you go talk to them ? I heard a man say once ' there's tongues in trees.' " I was a good deal taken aback. The old man was getting the best of me, but my 132 Dreaming Bob interest in him was growing, and I did not feel like beating a retreat. Still, I could not find anything to say, and I stood before him feeling very much like a child before a stranger. Meanwhile he continued probing for turtles, but eying me at the same time, I fancied. At last I hit upon one more ques- tion, and rather timidly asked, '^ Do you live near by ?** " Dog-town," he muttered. "As far as that?" I asked, with some surprise. "Just that far; and, if I must talk, in- stead of tortlin', why, let's go to the hill- foot and sit down." " All right." And, with this brief reply, I followed the old man to where a tree- trunk lay upon the ground, and there we sat down. ** Yes, young man," he commenced, •* I am a stranger in these parts, and yet I ain't." "How's that?" I asked. " I was born back in what's called ' Dog- town' in '20, and moved off when not more'n a baby, but not 'fore I had a notion o' what the place was like. It's been rough- Dreaming Bob 133 and-tumble ever since, and now I've drifted back. It's all changed but just round there, and folks ain't yet grudged me my shanty." ** Do you live alone ?" I asked. ** Say, please, young man, don't question too close. Do I live alone? * Alone:' that's a word that means too much for me. I don't like to hear it. Yes, I live by my- self," said the old man, in a voice quite dif- ferent from his brief words when on the meadow. Before I could find anything to say, he continued, ** I drifted back to these parts, and there's just one thing I want to do 'fore I slip up " " Slip up ?" I repeated after him, in a way that showed I had not caught his meaning. **Slip up, yes; die, I mean," he said, somewhat impatiently. ** Oh !" I exclaimed, adding, *« Go on : I won't interrupt again." " Daddy hid what he had somewherie in the woods, and never let on to me, 'cause I was too small, and just after mammy died he slipped up, a tree he was a-cuttin' fallin' on him. Bein' alone, some folks took me, and I kind o' lost all notion of what went on 134 Dreaming Bob when I had a hoixie^ till years and years slipped round, and then somehow it all come back to me, sudden-like ; but I'd been a fool all the time, spendin' one day what I earnt the day 'fore, and it was hard work to get anywhere near these parts. I got to seein' in dreams just where daddy put what he had, but what I see now round here ain't what it used to be." ** Not around Dog-town ?" I asked. ** Yes, it's sort o' the same round there, but the big timber's gone, and I can't place my dreamin' just as I want to. That dream ain't no common one. It's just a-goin' back to when I was that little feller as toddled about after daddy when he was workin' about home." '^ Tell me how the place looks in your dream. Perhaps I can help you out?" I asked. ''How can you?" asked the old man, giving a sudden start, and facing me. ** I know the history of these parts pretty well, and have some old deeds and docu- ments that might throw light on the sub- je6i," I replied, with much earnestness. ** Old deeds and dockiments : them's the Dreaming Bob 135 tools lawyers use to chisel folks out o' what they've got. They're no use," he remarked, with much disappointment in his voice and manner. ** They're not always that bad,, either documents or lawyers," I suggested. ** But come, what sort of a place was it ?" ** You see," he continued, as if not in- tending to give me a direfl reply or one at all, " I never saw the real spot to know it, and daddy never told, and p'r'aps he hadn't nothin', but that was my notion, and the spot was like this that I see in my dream. There was a big chestnut, and a squatty- like black oak, and an ash-tree kind o' bent over, and the ground sort o' high and mossy- like between 'em. I go there every night o' my life in my dream, and just as I find the thing " « What thing ?" I asked. ^'It's chest-like, only black, and brass nails in the lid," he explained. ** Where was your father's house ? Just where did it stand ?" I asked. ** That's just the trouble. I got nothin' to go by, and only sort o' guess it stood where the big clay-pits now is. I've squatted 136 Dreaming Bob near as I could get, in an old shanty, and go pokin' round when folks ain't too near to get curious; and, by thunder!" exclaimed the old man, with great energy, ** I'm a fool to give it all away, just because you pestered me out on the ma'sh." **I can keep a secret, sir," I remarked, with some show of dignity. << 'Course you can, but can and will ain't twin brothers by a jugful, young man. You can keep it, but are you goin' to ?" he asked, with a show of incredulity. •* Yes," I said, " I'm going to." «« Well, I can't call 'em back, and if I've throwed the fat in the fire it's my own fault," he remarked, rather sorrowfully. '^ But you haven't," I assured himy adding, *' I said I would keep your secret. Did the people digging clay ever find a chest, or haven't you asked ?" ** If they did, they never let on, for I sort o' questioned round when I was lookin' at 'em dig," he replied. " Can you find any trace of the trees you see in your dreams ?" I asked. ''Only one big chestnut stump, but the ground ain't right round it," he replied. Dreaming Bob 137 ** Did you dig round there ?'* I asked. ** Only a little ; and I say the ground ain't right. It's no use, and I guess the dream's devil's work just to fool me. Seems a pity he can't let me alone on airth, seein' he's got a mortgage on me due when I slip up." ** Don't get discouraged yet a bit," I replied : ** go on looking for turtles, and to- morrow I'll come see you." •* What for ?" he asked, with a strange look, as if he was both glad and sorry. ^* Because I'd like the fun of looking for the chest you dream about, and I'll look over some documents in the mean time and see when the big woods were cut off, and so on. I'll come about noon, and we'll talk it over again." I said this in a way to show that I meant it, and hoped he would cheer up a little, for I was now thoroughly inter- ested, even if the old man was slightly de- mented, which I did not think. **And I'll go back to my shanty and dream it all over again, and that's what it'll all amount to," he said, shaking his head. Leaving the old man to resume his turtle- hunting, I went home, with no other thoughts than of what I had been told, and all that 138 Dreaming Bob evening I recalled the old man's words, while looking over the early deeds that had passed from hand to hand, covering the swamp-land about Dog-town. II. It is not strange that I dreamed that night of the old man, — dreamed I was the old man himself and hunting in the woods for ** daddy's chest." I pushed through the painted meadow, breast-high in weeds,— boneset, iron-weed, and dodder, — all in bloom, and every ditch I leaped over was marked by plumes of lizard's tail or clustered rose-mallow. Never was meadow so beau- tiful; but I could not linger there. Ever ahead the crested tit was calling, ''Here, here," and I was forced to follow. Then the brush-land, now a sombre forest, was reached, and on through the pathless woods I sped, walking by no natural means, but hurried as if shod in seven-league boots, and stopping suddenly where there grew a great chestnut, an oak, and a bended ash- tree. I looked about for the old man, but he was not there. Instead, a brilliant cardi- nal flashed across the open, chased by a hun- Dreaming Bob 139 dred sparrows. Then a black hawk darted by, followed by scolding crows^ and disap- peared. It was like an engine and coal-cars rushing into a tunnel ; and all the while the crested tit that had charmed me called from overhead, " Here, here." After all, the old man was not demented, and I had found his " daddy's chest." Then 1 awoke. At the promised time I appeared at the door of the old man's shanty, and found him waiting. What a place for a man to live ! Except that he had a fire, there was almost nothing in the hut that we call the necessa- ries of life ; but the old man gave me no opportunity to scan his surroundings closely. He came out of the door-way, where he had been standing as I approached, and motioned to a bench under the single tree that shaded the spot. ** I've had a different dream, and want to tell all about it, for now I know it's no use to start a-huntin'. I was first in a ma'sh that looked like a flower-garden, and then in a big woods, and a little bird kept hollerin', *Here,' and I follered till I dropt on a bit of mossy ground. There was the same trees, but a lot of birds kept goin' by, and 140 Dreaming Bob they seemed to holler, ' Fool,' and I woke up all cold and shiverin'. It's no use. You seem sort o' sent to bring me to my senses or knock me clean out o' 'em, and it ain't much matter which, seein' I'm about used up." ** I don't agree with you, old man ; but first let me ask you your name," I said, in reply to his pathetic speech. ** My real name ? No ; but where I lived longest it was * Dreamin' Bob,' 'cause I used to say I was goin' to be rich when my dream come true." And for the first time the old man smiled as he spoke. « Well, I'll call you Robert, then," I re- plied. '' And let me tell you, I had almost the same dream, last night, that you did." ''You did?" And the old man looked very sceptical as he spoke. '' I did, and I think when I was a little boy I saw those trees in the woods. If you're in the notion now, we'll start on a hunt, for I'm a believer now in 'daddy's chest."' And I looked very serious as I spoke, to give him greater confidence in what I said. " Whether you're tryin' to make game of me or not, I'll go 'long," the old man said ; Dreaming Bob 141 ** but I don't go thinkin' you can help me out. What about you're old dockiments you were talkin' of? Did they help you out any ?" ** You made fun of 'em, and of deeds and lawyers and so on, but I know who you are," I replied. ** Who ?" he asked, stopping suddenly and facing me. '' Bartholomew Quiggle, son of old Aunt Betsy that kept cakes and beer in her day, when this was a stage road," I said, with a steady look into the old man's face. "Bartholomew Quiggle. It's the first time in many a long year since I heard it, 'cept when I said it to myself. Barthol but I'm too old to think about it now. Let's find the chest, and then it'll be time to talk it over." The old man moved for- ward. For the first time since I met him on the meadows did it occur to me I might be making a fool of myself. I was interested from the start, and had made an effort to identify the old man, which had proved an easy task, but that I should be influenced by a dream was absurd. Had not what he had 142 Dreaming Bob told me been enough to bring about such a dream ? Even ** Dreamin' Bob'* was losing faith in dreams after many years, and now I took it up with his former enthusiasm. It was absurd, and here I was, his guide, of my own volition, and not knowing in what dire£Uon to go. I hesitated, and he noticed it. '* What's the matter ?" he asked : " gettin' out o' the notion a'ready, when you was so full of it ?" ** Let's look over the ground youVe been examining," I suggested, not knowing what to say. ** It couldn't 'a' been far from the house, and it stood close on the road, you know," he replied, and this was a clue, if we could only locate the house. No document of mine helped me here; I could only guess ; and so we moved on, taking what I thought was a probable course. We were soon in a trafl of sprout-land, and the stumps of the original timber growth had quite disappeared. Here and there, though, was a variation in the level surface of the ground, — a slight elevation, and moss-cov- ered or bright green with a mat of fine Dreaming Bob 143 grass that showed the ground was there particularly fertile. All such places we ex- amined with some care, but to have dug into any one would have been absurd. Every such spot was counted out because of its position with reference to the public road. At last we came to where pine woods had been, a little island of pines once in a sea of white oaks. *^ Stop," cried the old man, who was a little distance off; ** there's been pines here, and somehow But my head's all mud- dled." And he stood by a stout sapling and leaned heavily against it. ** You've been walking too fast," I sug- gested. ** No, I ain't ; but that dream's botherin' me, and I feel sort o' queer," he said, with a trembling voice that frightened me. ** I'm tough enough, seein' what I've gone through in my day. Don't you worry : it's the dream. I sort o' feel as if it was comin' true." ** We will rest awhile, anyhow," I said, '' and have a bite of lunch." And I pulled a small package from my pocket. The old man evidently expedted me to produce a 144 Dreaming Bob whiskey-flask^ but I did not, and with a slight show of disappointment he accepted the solid food I offered. While we were eatings we heard voices near by, and I made a motion to keep quiet, to which he silently assented. Two men passed near us, but without discovering our whereabouts. When within hearing one was talking earnestly, narrating a recent ad- venture. **My dog treed something," he said, ''and I couldn't call him off, so I left my work and went over. The cur was diggin' a hole where there'd been a big tree standin' once, and I went up to see what he'd got. He'd struck a root, I thought, but, lookin* down, I saw a piece of board and an iron on it ; and, lookin' closer, it showed it was a box that had been buried." • ** No !" exclaimed his companion, stopping in the path and looking at his friend. ** You bet ; and I tackled the job quick, seein' some one might come and git it out. It was all rusty and rotten and filled with a mess o' stuff* I couldn't make out, and a big double handful of money." '' Gold ?" said the other man, interrupting the narrator. Dreaming Bob 145 "Gold! Well, I guess not. It was nothin' but pennies and a few things they told me used to be called iips and shillings. It didn't amount to five dollars all told, except what I got extra on some of the old pennies." While these men were talking, the old man did not move a muscle, but his face was the pi£lure of despair. I wished myself a hundred miles away. The finder of the treasure and his friend moved on, and when we could no longer hear their footsteps I turned to the old man and said, ''Well, what shall we do ?" ** I'm goin' back to my shanty, and you needn't come. I'm much obliged to you all the same." He turned and left me without saying even ** good-by." I did not follow him, much as I wished to do so, and I tried in vain to turn my thoughts into other channels than those concerning him. That night Dreaming Bob, otherwise Bartholomew Quiggle, died. zo WINKLE: "THE EEL-MAN I. DOES the place make the people ? Cer- tainly the mountaineer differs from the dweller on a plain, and those who have spent their days 'long shore are distinguish- able from either. Who has failed to notice that the country boy who leaves home for the town becomes ** citified" and in all ways unlike his home-staying brother ? Certainly the place has much to do with it, — as much as the mould decides the shape of the mass of clay the potter places within it. Heredity, too, a£b an important part. There was a Job Perriwinkle, servant, among the arrivals in West Jersey two centuries ago, and the Perriwinkles remained such for succeeding generations: the last of them just a little above that condition. These things con- sidered, it is not strange that ** Winkle," as 146 Winkle: the Eel-Man 147 every one knew him^ should have been a produ£l of Poverty Cross. A word here as to this strange place. It is where two old long-abandoned bridle- paths intersected^ near the middle of an irredeemable tra6t«-— one where Nature had tossed aside all the rubbish, after fashioning a goodly land. Originally it was known as Poverty Cross-roads, as one old deed attests ; but recently the interest in folk-lore and local history has brought to the front the champion of this strange explanation: that the name is derived from the fa£t that a missionary set up a station here, and, failing to make one convert, called the place Poverty Cross. This is how much local history is " made.'* But what better can be expedted? This place, and much of its surroundings for many a mile, offers no foothold for ambition. Those who remain are content with little, even intelle£lually, and were charmed re- cently by a pickwickian lecture on the ** Oneness of Unity and Differences of the Diametrically Opposite," even speaking of it, months after, as a '* learned discourse." But let us back to Winkle, the nearest to a savage of them all^ and so worthiest of con- 148 Winkle: the Eel-Man sidention. I will not attempt to describe him. The truth woald not be accepted^ and I will not spoil a good story by using false colors. I can only hope that his strange physique will shine through what I shall tell about him. I have said that the last of the Pern- winkles had a glimmer of higher aims than servitude, and while yet a lad had acquired such freedom as he wished, becoming a self- sustaining trapper, fowler, and fisherman. It was as the last that he pre-eminently ex- celled. He alone, of all the men who lived and loafed near the creek, knew Crosswicks Creek thoroughly. It seemed as if he must have felt with his hands or feet, or both, the whole bed of the stream, from the river, where it ended, up to the first mill-dam, a distance of about eight miles. On one oc- casion, when with Winkle, I remember he stopped his boat suddenly, and, thrusting an oar to the bottom, showed me how deep was the water at this point, — it was low tide at the time, — and remarked, '< Cur'us, but, lad, there's a walnut-stump down there that's three feet across. Once a time the creek ran over yander," and he pointed to a long row Til Ovirpi"!'^ Dilru Winkle: the Eel-Man 149 of sassafras-trees that divided a long level reach of dry pasture meadow from a wider area that was lower and marshy. '< If you stand," he continued, "at the end of the trees, you'll see a dip in the land, and that's the old creek-bed. It was in Injun times, o' course." « How came you ever to notice this," I asked, ''and find out about the walnut- stump ?" '' Umph ! Well, lad, I'm not a fisherman fur nothin'. There's nets been broke in that stump, and many a hook is stickin' in it now. Why, boy, it don't take long to dive down and see what's what ; and can't you see how land lays when you walk over it ?" he replied, with an over-abundance of contempt in both tone and manner. '* Not always," I replied. " Can't ? Then your eyes ain't o' much account. If a thing's right afore you and you can't see it, then what's the good o' having' tyes}" Cutting his speech short, he gave me a searching glance that explained a great deal of what was passing in his mind. He had taken me up as an apt pupil and now was disposed to set me down as a dullard. 150 Winkle: the Eel-Man This had been an earlier experience, and a hiter one, too, of mine. I was more sorry than surprised. It were foolish to attempt to attain to Winkle's excellencies in their pecu- liar lines. This strange man did not have ordinary human eyes. The four senses of touch, hearing, smell, and sight had been so devel- oped by constant use that he had brought them to the perfe£Uon that charaflerizes such wild animals as are forced to depend on them for their food and safety. The physi« ologist may laugh at this, and say it is im- possible, but I long ago learned to laugh at the do&ors. All that I have written was true of Winkle. He was too extraordinary a charadler to be described. The charge of exaggeration would surely follow; and yet it is unwise to stand in awe of critics. Not one of them ever saw the man. I knew him well, and he has been heard to say I was the only friend he ever had. I have said that he could not be described, but let me try. He was tall and slim, and his head was like his body, so that it pointed him off something like a clumsily-sharpened lead- pencil. His arms were snake-like, and, as a Winkle: the Eel-Man 151 neighbor once said, '< his legs are nothin' but a string o' knees." He could bend in half a dozen direflions at once, and when walking along the highway he swayed to and fro as if more than half intoxicated ; but in a nar- row, twisting forest-path he glided swiftly, silently, and ghost-like, making no overhang- ing branch bend by the pressure of his hands or body. He wormed his way between ob- stacles that check the progress of ordinary mortals, and it was a hopeless task for any one to attempt to follow him with the same speed and grace. He climbed a tree as a blacksnake darts over a brush-heap or glides along the top rail of an old worm-fence* Stretching along a slender branch. Winkle could reach to outlying points towards which no nest-robbing boy would dare to venture. Perhaps in all this he has had his equals. It was in the water that Winkle was at home. Then he always reminded me of a seal. His movements were very similar, for his arms were not prominent when he swam. The propelling force was derived wholly by leg- motion. The ignorant folk who knew him said that water did not wet him, which was not quite true, but never had a hair ever grown ip Winkle: the Eel-Man on Winkle's body, and his skin was oily to the touch, or, on land, like newly-made and flexible parchment. To be in the water, he always claimed, limbered him up, while too long tarrying on land caused him to wrinkle and crack like a dead leaf. This, his own way of putting it, tells truthfully the whole story. His clothing was of the simplest kind, and eight months of each year he was barefoot. It was an English gardener and poacher, who came to these parts when Winkle was in his prime, who gave him, with my aid, the name of the ** eel-man." One morning I met Jimmie on the public road, and he assured me that ** this veek 'as been a veek of ewents. Th' old woman has brown crit- ters in her throat, and I've seen a man as swims like a heel." II. ''Winkle," I said one morning, as I stood by the door of his quaint cabin,— ** Winkle, did you ever hear of the wreck of the Betsy Ann?" " Wrack o' who ?** he asked, with abun- dant surprise in his tones. " Wrack o' who ? k Winkle: the Eel-Man 153 I've heard o' xnore'n one woman bein' wracked by takin' up too quick with the fust to come along, but who's Betsy Ann ?'' ** Come^ old man," I said in an earnest way, to command his attention; <'I mean just what I say. Didn't your folks ever tell you about the sloop, Betsy Ann, that got wrecked off the mouth of Barge Creek ?" '* No ; nor yours neither, I guess. Why, lad, there ain't room enough at the mouth o' Barge for anythin' bigger'n a skiff to get swamped. You've got things mixed, lad," Winkle replied, with earnestness quite equal to my own. In fa6b, my question was an intimation that I had superior knowledge of the creek's history, if not of the stream itself, and this he was quite unwilling to allow. After a lengthy pause, which I did not inter- rupt, he continued, <' You'll be laughed at some time if you ain't kerful about keepin' stories straight. This creek here ain't the 'Lantic Ocean, and ship wracks sound bet- ter when you talk about the sea-shore. Guess your Betsy Ann was only a hay-scow and medder-grass the cargo," and Winkle chuckled to himself at the thought of having squelched me. 154 Winkle: the Eel-Man I was not unprepared for this, and let him have his fill of enjoyment at my expense before I spoke again ; then I remarked^ in a quiet way that 'showed how sure I felt of what I was saying, <